16 May, 2021

WHERE DID THE NOAH'S FLOOD OCCUR?


Biblical answer to that question is in the "earth of Ararat." 

The Bible is very explicit in saying where was exactly that fountain flood  had happened when it says:

"wa-tanakh (and rested)
ha-teba (the ark)
ba-chodez (in the month)
hatzebyi (7th),
betzib'ah-'ashar (on the 17th)
yōm (day)
la-chodez (of the month)
'al (on)
harei (mountains)
'ararath (of Ararat)." 
- Genesis 8:4

Moses (Torah) says that the ark had rested on the "mountains of Ararat." He uses plural here to mean a region

And that region was also popularly known as 

"'eretz ararath
("earth of Ararat"). 

History indirectly relates that "earth of Ararat" to the Noah's ark in an incident during the time of king Sennacherib - an event that is hinted from prophet Isaiah's report after Sennacherib built a movable shrine of a plank claimed to be taken from Noah's ark. 

"And it come to happen as he was worshipping 

Beth Nisar-okh 
[Great House Nisar]

  his god, that Adrammelech and Sharezer his sons smote him with a sword and they fled to [the] earth of Ararat."

Let us further dissect this passage in this way:

"wayhî (and it came to pass)
(as he)
mischtakhāweh (was worshipping)

bêth (house)
nisrōkh (Great Nisar)

'elōhāw (his god)
wa'adhrammelekh (that Adrammelech)
washar'etser (and Sharezer)
bānāw (his sons)
hikuhu (struck him)
ba-chereb (with a sword)
wehêmāh (and they)
nimlathu (escaped in to)
'eretz (earth)
'ararath (of Ararat)..." - Isaiah 37:38

This incident was possibly reported in the kingdom of Judah, as a form of religious encouragement that Yahweh punishes Sennacherib because of his mocking the God of Abraham. 
The Assyrian king never defeated king Hezekiah (r.715-686 BCE) of Judah and because of desperation, Sennacherib sought all means to win in the succeeding battles, resulting later to looting a plank from Noah's ark after he envied Abraham because that God (Yah) is caring for Judah, and he tried to bribe this God (Ya) by making Beth-Nisroch, a god made with the said plank and called its temple Araske (after the name of Lesser Araske river  going to Arzap/Kazan west south of Mt. Ararat) and erected such a shrine made of bricks in his border in what is now called Mt. Cudi. 
Babylonian Talmud further relates: 

"He then went away, 
and found a plank of Noah's Ark. 
'This,' said he, 'must be the great God who saved Noah from the flood. If I go [to battle] and am successful, I will sacrifice my two sons to thee,' he vowed. 
But his sons heard this, so they killed him,..." - Tractate Sanhedrin, folio 96a


The "house" that Sennacherib worshipped as the "great god" was said a plank of Noah's Ark which he probably received from a pilgrim who looted it in around 686 BCE 
and which he called "Nisrokh" ("Great Nisar"), masculine of "Nisar" which was a Babylonian goddess of agriculture. Prophet Isaiah retained untranslated this name ("Nisroch"), but a Judaean servant of the Assyrian king translated it into "Dagon."  
This "Dagon" could have two meanings: first as a direct translation, it means "god of agriculture" and second as a shape, it may mean "fish," referring to the shape of the ark.
It's not difficult for Sennacherib to have such a plank because in 705 BCE Argishti II ( c.713 - c.685 BCE), king of Urartu, had a peace treaty with him.

"But not 40 days had passed, two of Sennacherib's sons assassinated him and then escaped to the
 mountains of Ararat. 
Another son, Sacherdonos [Esarhaddon], reigned after him who appointed Achikar [Achiacharus], my brother Hanael's son, in charge of all the financial affairs of the empire. " - Tobit 1:21

"Adrammelech and Sharezer, they laid in wait for him, and killed him with the sword at the time he went to pray before Dagon his god" (Tobit 1:24)

Official cuneiform record reported that...

" On 20th Tebet Sennacherib, king of Assyria, was killed by his son in a revolt." - Babylonian Chronicle column 3:34


Tobit, a contemporary of Sennacherib and Esarhaddon, was saying that on 4th January 681 BCE Sennacherib was murdered by his sons, and since only one sword was used to kill him (as what prophet Isaiah has reported, too), it simply means only one of the two who really killed him, and

" ... they fled 

eis ta ore A'rarath 
(into the mountains of Ararat),

... "

on February 15, after killing any body who would reveal Adrammelech's plot, but Esarhaddon took the throne on May 29, 681 BCE. 

King Esarhaddon called this

 "ore A'rarath" ("mountains of Ararat") 

as 

"Parts Unknown

or of nisirtu, when he officially reported:

" As for those villains [Adrammelech and Sharezer] who instigated revolt and rebellion, when they heard of the approach of my army, they abandoned their troops, and fled to 
parts unknown " - ARAB 2:202

This "Parts Unknown" is what the Gilgamesh Epic called "Nisir" (Hidden).

Historically, what prophet Isaiah has reported " 'eretz ararath" ("earth of Ararat") is what Tobit called "ore A'rarath" ('mountains of Ararat'), which eventually called "Parts Unknown" by king Esarhaddon (681 BCE). And this Parts Unknown are what flood epic called "Nisir" ("Unknown"), and one of the mounds or hills on this Nisir, according to Gilgamesh Epic, was the landing site of the huge boat of Utnapishtim (Noah).


The 630's BCE version of Gilgamesh Epic has said that:

"the wooden-boat was held tight and could not move on a hill country of Nisir." 

  " KUR-ú KUR (Hill country)
 ni-sir (Nisir)
GIŠ (wooden) 
eleppu (boat)
 is-bat-ma (held-tight)
 a-na (that)
na-a-ši (its-movement)
ul (not)
id-din (allowed). " - Gilgamesh Epic, tablet 11,  line 141

King Ashurbanipal (669- c.627 BCE), the publisher of the Standard Epic of Gilgamesh, claimed that the version he has had was written by Sin-leqi-unninni (1000 BCE). 
Most likely this Sin-leqi-unninni who had edited the Epic of Gilgamesh was the scribe who inserted 

tablet 11 (Flood Story) 

to be included. If he was the source of the name 

"Nisir,"

 then it simply means this Sin-leqi-unninni edited the Epic of Gilgamesh in around 880 BCE, because the term "Nisir" has its first appearance in historical cuneiform record when it was used by king Ashur-nasir-pal in 881 BCE during a campaign in Urartu, particularly in Nodshirakan (Adiabene) - a range of mountains and hills from Lower Zab river to Ziyaret (Zaranda-Bari border). And this may also imply that the standardization of Gilgamesh Epic was to mimic the victory of king Hezekiah of Judah in using literature (books published by king Solomon) to tightly unite citizens and soldiers in one faith. King Hezekiah translated the books of king Solomon into Judaean langauge understandable to laymen (cf. Proverbs 25:1). And those published books may include the ancient versions of Moses' writings, particularly about their God Yahweh. 

King Sennacherib tried to discourage Judaeans by mocking the name of Yahweh, but he failed and never defeated Jerusalem, and made retirement from spoiling much failures against Jerusalem; but never forget his lost that later he revived his interest by trying to bribe Noah's God and by mimicking a symbol of unification: Beth Nisroch, a house god Nisar, claimed as derived from a plank of Noah's Ark. Unfortunately, this same house god triggered indirectly his death on January 4, 681 BCE after his barbaric idea that he would sacrifice alive his two elder sons if he could win the battle.

So, with the term "Nisir" we can be certained that Sin-leqi-nninni had edited the complete Epic of Gilgamesh around 880 BCE, and also the possible reason why he put an incipit "Sha naqba īmuru ("He who Saw the Deep") to mean that Utnapishtim had seen the deep (flood or the Yaredu [descent, down of Mashu]) or that Gilgamesh had seen the "Unknown" (Nisir). 
Sin-leqi-unninni possibly plagiarized the Flood Story from the Epic of Atrahasis, Sumerian Epic of Ziusudra, and apparently from Moses' Flood story. 

The original Epic of Gilgamesh may have no Flood Story (tablet 11). It has the incipit or opening words:

"Shūtur eli sharrī"  ("Surpassing All Other Kings").
 
King Ashurbanipal has an indication that the Gilgamesh Epic of Sin-leqi-nninni was plagiarized from Epic of Atrahasis as it mentions "Atrahasis" in the story and it copied directly some lines from Atrahasis' epic. 
The oldest copy of the Atrahasis Epic can be dated by colophon (scribal identification) to the reign of Ammi-Saduqa (1550-1530  BCE), grandson of king Hammurabi of Babylon.
 It is expected that Babylonians became concern about this story, as their founder 

"Sumu-abum" (1798-1785 BCE)

 was  proud to be called "Whose Father is Shem." Shem was a chronologically contemporary of king Nuabu ("Whose Father is Noah") of Assyria. 


According to king Hammurabi's list of ancestors, Nuabu (c. 2000 BCE) was the 10th generation after Tudiya-Adam, the first ruler of Assyria.


Genesis 2:14-15 describes that "Adam" was the first ruler of ASSYRIA, particularly in the western part.

 Ugarit (Syrian) scribe had also a version of Atrahasis Epic.              
The incipit of Atrahasis Epic is  “When gods were in the ways of men," relating how gods (priests) were like ordinary men, working a heavy job (like farming, making garden, irrigation, and so on), which later resulted to a revolt of Anunnaki (junior gods of high earth, i.e. priests of the mountains) and ended to a resolution of sacrificing Geshtu-E, one of the gods (priests) by a ritual of mixing his blood to a human figurine soil, symbolizing appointing ordinary men to toil the land for the gods (priests). 
Tablet 3 of Atrahasis Epic mentions that Enki (Ea) spoke on a reed wall in a dream to warn Atrahasis about the impending flood and gave an advice to dismantle his house to build a huge boat.
The name Atrahasis is possibly not a birthname but an alias he had received after he had wisely survived the river flood. In later edition, this name might have changed into Akkadian "Utnapishtim," whose name means "He Found Life." This latter name was a translation of the Old Babylonian name Ziusudra.

The name Ziusudra, Atrahasis, or Utnapishtim is not mentioned in the Sumerian King List Weld-Blunfell Prism (WB 444 AN1923.444) published by king Sin-magir around 1721 BCE, rather the kinglist records:

"Then Zimbir fell and the kingship was taken to Shuruppak. [And ] 

Ubara-Tutu [reigned] 5 sars, 1 ner

Then the flood swept over.
After the flood had swept over, and the kingship had descended from heaven, the kingship was in Kish. [And ruled] Jushur for 33 sars."

This may mean that a devastating Shuruppak flood had really happened during the time of king Ubara-Tutu (c. 2950 BCE). 
However, when another flood happened in 2029 BCE and became more dramatic because the flood hero built and survived by a huge boat, a small cuneiform kinglist (WB 62) published around c. 1950 BCE adjusted it by describing "Zin-Suddu [Ziusudra], son of SU.KUR.LAM [Shuruppak] grandson of Ubara-Tutu" as the king and priest when the flood took place. 
In Babylonian language, Zi-ud-sura means "Found Long Life," which later directly translated as "Uta-Napishti" ("He Found Life").
This could be how southern Mesopotamian scribes plagiarized the Ararat flood, by changing the name of the flood hero into Ziusudra, and edited it with Sumerian langauge. Hence, around 1700 BCE the Sumerian Epic of Ziusudra was published. Fortunately the Epic of Ziusudra is honest to mention that the flood hero was living in "Dilmun," a distant place known for its woods and copper (in Diyarbakr) in the region called by the Sumerians as Erin (Cedar) untranslated in Moses (Torah) as Eden, what we called today Syria
These trees of Eden were located from Lebanon to Assyria, according to the Bible.

"Behold, the 

Assyrian was a cedar in Lebanon

 with fair branches, and with a shadowing shroud, and of an high stature; and his top was among the thick boughs. 
The 

cedars in the garden of God

 could not hide him: the fir trees were not like his boughs, and the chesnut trees were not like his branches; nor any tree in the garden of God was like unto him in his beauty. 
I made the nations to shake at the sound of his fall, when I cast him down to hell with them that descend into the pit: and 

all the trees of Eden, the choice and best of Lebanon,

 all that drink water, shall be comforted in the nether parts of the earth." - Ezekiel 31:3,8,16 (KJV)

And in around 880 BCE when Sin-leqi-nninni plagiarized the Epic of Ziusudra, he mentions:

"godchild of Ubaratutu, who lives a pious life in fair Dilmun where Shamash rises as it does in paradises lost and won" (Gilgamesh Epic, tablet 9, column 1, line 10)

Cedar (Erēnu) of Syria was known as the shade of Dilmun. Hebrews Hebrized that Sumerian word "Erin" into Eden, referring to the region of Cedar and various trees in Syria from Tyre to Dilmun (Diyarbakr) as we can discern from Ezekiel 31:8,16 and 28:12-13. The Tyre being mentioned by prophet Ezekiel may refer to Sumerian term "TIR" ("Forest").

King Sargon described that Tilmun (Dilmun) as near Tuttul, Mari, Yarmutu (Jarmoth), Ibla (Ebla), and Cedar (Lebanon, Syria). 

"Sargon king of Kish was victorious in 34 campaigns; the city walls he destroyed as far as the shore of the sea; he caused to be moored at the wharf of Akkad ships from Melukha, and ships from Magan and ships from Tilmun (Dilmun). King Sargon prostrated himself in prayer before Dagan in Tutul; and he gave him the upper region, including Mari, Yarmutu, and Ebla as far as the Cedar Forest [Lebanon] and Silver Mountain [Taurus]. Enlil permitted no one to oppose king Sargon," - Sargon of Akkad (r. 2238-2183 BCE)


As early as 25th century BCE Dilmun was known for woods brought by its boats as officially reported by a king of Lagash. 

"boats from the land of Dilmun carried the woods" - king Urnanshe (c. 2400 BCE)

This may mean that woods from Cedar Forest were carried on by the ships of Dilmun to southern Mesopotamia. According to several Uruk III (2016-1908 BCE) texts, Dilmon was a good source of copper, which was referring to Diyarbakr, hence Sumerians borrowed their term for copper from the Hurrians of the ancient Diyarbakr.

Ziusudra Epic reported that the flood hero was permitted to live in Dilmun. 

"king Ziusudra ...they caused to dwell in the land of the country of Dilmun, the place where Shamash rises." - Epic of Ziusudra, line 261

The 630 BCE Gilgamesh Epic described further, although omitted the term Dilmon:

"Formerly Utnapishtim was a human being, but now he and his wife have become gods like us. Let Utnapishtim reside far away, at the mouth of the rivers." 
- dingir-kabtu [divine important person], Gilgamesh Epic, tablet 11, lines 202-204

It indirectly describes where gods are living - at the mouth of the rivers. The dingir-kabtu, who pronounces this, is a man who represents a god. He is a priest who emphasizes his distinction from ordinary humans. And these junior gods (called Anunnaki) were human beings who presided as divine beings (priests); these gods were too much frightened by the flood. 

"The Anunnaki, those great gods [were sitt]ing in thirst and hunger." - Epic of Atrahasis, OB tablet 3, lines 30-31

And that Utnapishtim (Ziusudra) became one of the gods simply means he became one of the priests. Cuneiform list WB 62 reported that the flood survivor was a gudug priest.


The rivers, whose mouth where Utnapishtim lived at, refer to Tigris in Dilmun (Diyarbakr - there is no Tigris in Bahrain), Euphrates in Mt. Abos (Yanikcukur), Lesser Araske river from Gülü lake to Arzap (Kazan), and probably a river in the border of Iran-Turkey. King of Uruk, alias Gilgamesh, after 2029 BCE was searching for the flood hero by going to traditional route: to Metsamor and then to Mashu (Mt. Ararat), and when he found him not, he went to ERIN (Cedar Forest) and then to Dilmun, and there he found Urshanabi at Arzap/Kazan; since there was still a body of water, they sailed traversing the "Waters of Death" going to Nasar, at the foot of the hill of Baris-Ziyareth Dag. And the flood hero learned their arrival at the First Landing Site.

To further determine it, we can cite king Sargon (722-702 BCE) who describes that king Uperi of Dilmon was living a mere 30 beru (116-257 km, 72-160 miles) in the midst of the sea, which could be an island in Nairi Sea (Lake Van) or on formerly rain-lake near Arzap (Kazan), south of Mt. Ararat.

Through prophet Ezekiel the location of the flood could be understood as the location where the Nephilim had been buried, and it was called "Yardu" or "Down" - a lower ground on the southern foot of Mashu (Mt. Ararat). 

"There is Meshech, Tubal, and all her multitude: her graves are round about him: all of them uncircumcised, slain by the sword, though they caused their terror in the land of the living. 
Do they not lie with the other uncircumcised warriors, who were 

giborim Nophilim,

who are gone 
YARDU (Down)
to the grave with their weapons of war, whose swords were placed under their souls? The punishment for their sins rested on their bones, though the terror of these warriors had stalked through the land of the living." - Ezekiel 32:26-27

In Genesis 6:4 they are described as the "mighty men of old, men of renown." 

"The Nephilim were on the earth in those days - and also afterward - when the sons of elohim went to the daughters of men and had children by them. They were the heroes of antiquity, popular men. Yah saw how great man's wickedness on the earth had become, and that every inclination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil all the time." - Genesis 6:4-5

If we will follow Ezekiel's hint, we can suppose that these Nophilim had descended from Meshech and Tubal in what we called in history as the Hittite land. They were the people who had copper sources, known for smelting swords or weaponry. 
Adding to the region's location is the fact that in Gilgamesh Epic tablet 11, lines 87-101 the boatman of the ship of Utnapishtim (Noah) was Purur-amurri, an Amorite - suggesting that the flood happened around 2029 BCE and was a river flood, as Amorites were living in the region of many rivers and Amorites migrated to Mesopotamian region in c. 2100 BCE.The older Atrahasis Epic can corroborate that it was a river flood.
 
"Like dragonflies they have filled the river. Like a raft they have moved in to the edge. Like a raft...they have moved in to the riverbank." - Epic of Atrahasis, tablet 3, column 4, lines 6-9

In the Bible it started as a fountain flood coupled with a continuous strong rain, which expectedly turned into a river flood. Later, the body of water it had left on the foot of Mt. Ararat's southern part became enough for Sin-leqi-unninni to describe it as a sea flood. That sea or lake of rain was likely still visible during the time of king Ashurbanipal (630 BCE) until the time of Herodotus (c. 425 BCE).


 If we will read the hint of Urshanabi, Arzap (Kazan) was a mountain as it was an island between 880-620's BCE. Sacred stones of Urshanabi are reported by Gilgamesh Epic to be located on the island where Urshanabi lived. The area west north of Arzap was called Hell or Down (Yardu) in the epic, probably because the fire of hell (Mt. Ararat volcano) that is descending to that direction. 
This could be the reason why Syriac scribes of Targum (Chaldee version) translated "Ararat" in Isaiah 37:38 as 

"Karedu [Kardu]," 

which originally may mean "Descent" and later called by the Armenians as "Nakhichevan" ("Place of Descent"), the Naxouana in Ptolemy's report.

Yerushalmi Megillah i.71b paraphrased Jeremiah 51:27's " Ararat, Minni, Ashkenaz" as 

"Kordu, Harmini, and Hadayab," 

which are referring to the provinces of

" Ayrarat, Vaspurakan, and Nor Shirakan, " respectively.


Unlike to Sumerian Epic of Ziusudra, Babylonian Epic of Atrahasis, and Assyrian Epic of Gilgamesh, the Flood Story of Moses (Torah) mentions the exact location of the resting site of the big ark, and it untranslated the original name: 

"mountains of Ararat."

The term "Ararat" was the Hebrew rendering of the 21st century BCE term " Aratta," which in Sanskrit and in Enmerkar and the lord of Aratta means "holy land." 
A 21th century BCE cuneiform record has alluded the flood of Ararat when it says:

"Inana, the lady of all the lands, has surrounded

 Aratta,

 on its right and left, for her like a rising 

flood.

 They are people whom she has separated from other people, they are people whom Dumuzid [the Fisherman] has made step forth from other people, who firmly establish the holy words of Inana. [ . . . ] After the flood had swept over, Inana, the lady of all the lands, from her great love of Dumuzid, has sprinkled the water of life upon those who had stood in the face of the flood and made the Land subject to them." - Enmerkar and the Lord of Aratta, lines 557-576

The king of Aratta here is not called "king" because since the time of "Adam," the first ruler of Assyria, their "king" was but God. 

In Gilgamesh and Huwawa it is said that "a decision that concerns the mountains is the business of Utu (Shamash/Sun). A decision that concerns the 

GISH erin-kud
(Mountains of Cedar-felling)

 is the business of youthful Utu (Sun)." 

Mountains here refers to "Aratta" and Mountains of Cedar-felling refers to Eden (Syrian region). According to Sumerian, Babylonian, and Akkadian epics of the flood, Dilmun is where Shamash (Utu/Sun) rises. And they depicted it on a seal. 


On this Babylonian seal, it is correctly depicted that Sun (Utu/Shamash) is rising on Lesser Masis to the east of Mashu, and located the Greater Masis on the west. 
Mashu is a Twin-peaked Mountain. Native Armenians untranslated this as "Masis," but European writers changed its name into "Mt. Ararat." 

Mt. Ararat is different from "mountains of Ararat," the latter being a region known to prophet Isaiah as "earth of Ararat." 
Both Tobit, prophet Jeremiah and and prophet Isaiah untranslated what Moses (Torah) called "Ararat". 
Moses untranslated what the primitive Urartian ancestors called "Aratta." 
Aratta was a 2100 BCE term for the mountainous region above Zubi mountain (Minyas/Mannaean land) and before reaching Shubur (Amida/Diyarbakr region). 
In around 1263 BCE southern part of Aratta was revived and called by Assyrian king Shalmaneser as "Uruatri," which in the 9th century BCE was called Urartu. 

Around 850 BCE Arzashkun (near the starting point of Euphrates in Yanikcukur) was the first capital of Urartu before the capital was transferred to Tuspha, after 832 BCE. This may mean that the book of Genesis that contains Flood Story mentioning "Ararat" was published either before 850 BCE or but not after 832 BCE, as this Urartu almost exactly corresponds to Moses' Ararat.
Like in Torah, Quran Surah 11:44 does not mention "jabal" (mount) or  "jabal Gudiyy" (Mount Judi), but al-Gudiyy (the Gudiyy). And this Gudiyy is the Arabic form of Tsa-du-u (Sha-du-u), a region known to ancient merchants as the Mountainous Region north of Urartu. 

With this oldest extant Babylonian ancient world map, we can discern where exactly located "Sha-du-u," the region mentions in Gilgamesh Epic as the site of Nisir and where the huge boat landed. The map describes that Urashtu (Ararat) is above Assur and that 'Shadu-u,' known in ancient Arabic speaking people "al-Gudiyy" ("Mountain"), is located above a city of Urartu (Ararat). This could not be in Mt. Cudi of the Muslims, but Mt. Abos and beyond.  

The map does not show there is an island in Muslim's Mt. Cudi. However, it depitcs that there is an island near Sha-du-u, and history says that there was an island in Dilmon, and that the flood hero lived in Dilmon. This map settles once and for all the issue regarding the whereabouts of al-Gudiyy (Sha-du-u Nisir). Al-Gudiyy was originally not in Assyria n Mt. Cudi.


Note: Babylonian Chronicle : Schrader, Keilinschriftliche Bibliothek, II. pp. 281

04 May, 2021

WRONG WORDING


The title itself is wrong. There is no ark there. What is there is soil, or more accurately ship-shaped soil/rocks. 

    Viking Ship

(world-archaeology.com, Amy Brunskill; Flipboard)

To call the next sample "Viking Ship" is wrong because there is no ship there. What we can find there is a ship-shaped soil formed by natural geophysical activities. 
The question is, where did the natural geophysical activities take the shape?
Some may theorize that it's itched by nature accidentally, the way scientists claimed for the ship-shaped mound in Durupinar site. 
But, people who are exposed to various natural formations will claim natural geophysical activities took the shape from a ship, most likely man-made ship. 

This is where both the camps of Wyatt and antagonist scientists got wrong. The Wyatt camp is still insisting that it is the Noah's Ark despite of the fact that it is a ship-shaped soil/rock formation, whereas antagonist scientists are keep insisting that nature accidentally itched the ship-shape & horribly claim that a few grams rock samples represent the entire ship-shaped mound. 

To archeologically completely determine the ship-shaped structure in Durupinar, archeologists must destroy it, the way they destroyed the Viking Ship-Shaped Structure, which means destroying the major evidence (the ship-shaped formation) in exchange of archaeological dig findings, and this is where the provincial government of Turkey intervened because destroying it to prove it is a kind of destroying the major fossil and they do not allow it to happen. What the Turkish government allows is to scientifically study the ship-shaped structure without destroying it, and some archeologists seem do not want any other scientific approach to study it except by destroying it, and sadly even making lies by a conclusion not conclusive. 
They even used the strong stand of Fasold that there is no Noah's Ark had been found in the site, and in fact Fasold testified in 1997 in an Australian court that the Ark has been found is "absolute BS." 
Why? 
Because for Fasold it is the fossilized remains of the Noah's ark and not the ark itself. 
And yet, a certain liar scientist is trying to change this history, a history that for Fasold this is a fossilized remains of the ark.




02 May, 2021

NOAH'S FLOOD WAS A FOUNTAIN-RAIN FLOOD


The Bible does not mention a "GREAT flood" either in Old or New Testament, rather it describes the Noah's flood as 
a fountain flood with rain. 

A fountain is smaller than a river. Neither the Bible mentions that is was a sea flood or an ocean flood. 

"...ba-hodes (in the month)
hasheni ( 2nd ),
ba-shiba (on the 7)
'asar (plus 10th)
yōm (day)
la-hodes (of the month),
ba-yom hazzeh (on this day)
nibhqa'u (burst forth)
kal- (upon)

mayanoth (the FOUNTAINS)
tehom rabah (of great deep),

wa'arubot (and the latices)
ha-shamayim (of the lofty-waters/sky-clouds)
niphtahu (were opened).
Wayhî (and was) 
hagesem (the rain)
'al- (upon)
ha'ares (the earth/soil), 
urbaim (40)
yōm (days)
wa'arbaim (and 40)
layalah (nights)." 
- Genesis 7:11-12

Moses (Torah) is describing here that on May 20th, 2029 BCE during the flood time of Tigris-Euphrates rivers, all

MAYANOTH (fountains)

TEHOM RABAH (of great deep)

burst forth, and latices of sky-clouds were opened. 

Mayanoth in Isaiah 41:18 and Proverbs 8:24 may also mean "springs," which are the sources of river waters, and it is derived from the root word "ma'yan." Joshua describes "mayan" as a well, and Solomon further describes it as what waters a garden. (Joshua 18:15, Songs of Songs 4:15). 
But the fountains being mentioned in Genesis 7:11 are called "of great deep," which means the source of water of the pond or lake that could be dried up because those fountains are connected to volcanic fire in one way or another under the ground. Prophet Isaiah knew that also that there are waters of great deep that dry up. 

"Art thou not it which hath dried the sea, the waters of the 

great deep;

 that hath made the depths of the sea a way for the ransomed to pass over? " - Isaiah 51:10
(KJV)


And in Amos 7:4 "great deep" is described as connected to fire, most likely under a mount.

"Thus hath the Lord GOD shewed unto me: and, behold, the Lord GOD called to contend by 

fire, and it devoured the 

great deep,

 and did eat up a part. " - Amos 7:4
(KJV)

So, what were bursted out were fountains connected to volcanoes deep down in the ground, and those volcanoes are in the earth of Ararat. The plain south of Masis (Mt. Ararat) have traces of ponds that may be what Ashurbanipal's Gilgamesh Epic called "sea" during 8th century BCE and still visible during the time of Herodotus. That area is east north of Lesser Araske river and where Arzap (Kazan) is located. The mount east of Arzap turned into "island" during the Ashurbanipal's Gilgamesh Epic's writing, and where the "sacred stones" of Urshanabi are located. Some of those stones are half cut because, according to the epic, Gilgamesh has destroyed many of them (in around 2000 BCE).

(Sacred Stones of Urshanabi are still there in the former residence area of Urshanabi, the friend of the flood hero.)

In Gilgamesh Epic, the area is identified as "apsû" (fresh deep water), but Moses is more accurate in describing that it's not just deep fresh water, but also "of great deep" - or affected by volcanoes. Apsu is the Akkadian of Sumerian term "ZU.AB," derived from the words "ab" (water) and "zu" (deep). 
Both Moses (Torah) and Gilgamesh Epic were derived from a common source of information but Moses describes it more vividly and accurately. 

Ea (Ya), the God which made man from god's & earth's substances, instructed Atrahasis (Noah) to make roof like as apsu has roof. 

"Like the Apsu you shall roof it." - Atrahasis Epic 3.1.29 
(Gilgamesh Epic 11.31)

This may mean that Atra-Hasis covered the top of the ark with solidified soil or, likely, rocks, as apsu (great deep waters) is roofed with soil and rocks. 
Atrahasis reason out to the elders that his god and Enlil, probably via priests, were not united and he wanted to live with Enki in the apsû, which necessitated him to build a big boat enough as a shelter for his family and a zoo for livestock. Utnapishtim (Noah) left Shuruppak and went to apsu (source of river water), that is, either in Dilmun (Diyarbakr) or in Mt. Abos. 

"I will go down [the river] to the apsû to live with Ea, my Lord." - Gilgamesh 11.42

And that apsû is near Dilmun (Diyarbakr), the land of copper, east of Syria or southwest of Nairi Sea (Lake Van) in Ararat region. 



There are a lot of "fountains of the great deep" in Ararat region, and that is why in Gilgamesh Epic the place where Utnapishtim (Noah) was living is described as "mouth of rivers," because Mt. Abos, in which belongs the Tendurek volcano and Nasar settlement (Akyayla site), is the starting point of Euphrates river via Arsanias river. 
In around 2040's BCE, there was a lacking of grain in Aratta and its ruler did not surrender it's yoke to the lordship of Enmerkar unless the latter would send grain to Aratta. 

Be noted that Moses untranslated "Aratta" as "Ararat" when he mentioned about the area where Noah's big boat floated on. 

 Enmerkar reigned 1300 years, cryptically meant the real Enmerkar lived in around 3100 BCE. This famine may mean that the Aratta land was under certain volcanic activities, that could dry up the land, and sooner could cause devasting flood. And probably through the Sacred Stones of gods (priests) in Arzap, a god predicted that Mashu (Mt. Ararat) was about to cause flood. And Atrahasis (Noah) encountered in a dream the god Ea which whispered on his reed wall an instruction to him to build a big reed boat because of the impending flood. 

NOAH IN HISTORY


There is no direct mentioning of Noah.
But we have had indirect reference to Noah in history when Assyrian kinglist named the 10th generation king after (Tudiya-) Adam as 

"Nuabu" ("Whose Father is Noah"), 

who ruled during the time of biblical Shem. While king Hammurabi of Babylon traced his ancestor back to Tudiya-Adam (the first leader of Assyria) and split the descendant to Nuabu, Sumuabum on the other hand has the name that means "Whose Father is Shem.

Sumuabum (1798-1785 BCE) was the founder of Old Babylon and his name suggests that he was a descendant of "Sumu" ("Shem"), the ancestor of the people that lived in east or northeast of Beth-Eden (Bit-Adini). 
Chronologically speaking, Nuabu ("Whose Father is Noah") is contemporary of the biblical Shem and he was the 10th generation after Adam, the first governor of Assyria. In the Bible, Adam was a ruler who lived in the western part of Assyria in an area called "Garden" located in Eden (Eden was a region now known as "Syria"). 

In Atrahasis Epic, the flood hero is named "Atra-Hasis," a translation of the Sumerian name Ziusudra ("Found Long Life"). The first user of the name "Zin-Suddu" was a king during the 2900 BCE Shuruppak river flood, but his name was used for Ziusudra, a legendary name for a flood hero of 2029 BCE.  

The oldest datable Epic of such this flood was written during the time of Babylonian king Ammisaduqa (1550-1530 BCE) in which Ziusudra was the flood hero and lived in Dilmun (Diyarbakr) and which is the source of the Gilgamesh Epic's flood story.

 Atra-Hasis describes the incident as a RIVER flood after of which many had died, floating on the water:

"Like dragonflies they have filled the river." - Atrahasis 3.4.6-7

And this description corroborates what the Bible says, that it was by all fountains of GREAT deep and by 40 days' rain. The major contributor of this flood was River Araxes. Herodotus described that there was a Great and a Lesser Araske river. The Greater Araxes is on the north of Masis (Mashu), whereas the Lesser Araske is at west south of Masis.
Lake of Balik Gülü might have overflown to Lesser Araske river, which in turned ran toward east of Arzap (Kazan) and started to fill in the plain area on the foot of Mashu (Mt. Ararat). 

Other fountains of great deep also bursted out and increase the water supply on May 20, 2029 BCE. What triggered this bursting of fountains of the great deep? Scientists discovered that pyroclastic flow deposits covered ruins in the early Bronze Age (around 2450 BCE and perhaps 2029 BCE). There was volcanic activities deep in Masis (Mt. Ararat). And it was coupled with the fact that Mt. Ararat has much precipitation during May reaching 7 days in a month. 

".... in the 2nd month, the 17th day of the month, the same day were all the

 fountains of the great deep

 broken up, and the windows of heaven were opened. " - Genesis 7:11

 There was a continuous evaporation of water and clouds above remained heavy for one month. 

"And the rain was upon the earth 40 days and forty nights. " - Genesis 7:12

The flood of increasing water lasted for 40 days, and the flood of decreasing water lasted till the 150th day. And this prolonged rain might be caused by the fact that Mt. Ararat was hot during June reaching its temperature up to 32° Celsius, that may evaporate a lot of water from lakes. 

The Bible is teaching that rain is localized upon certain area of the land because it is dependent on the water vapor nearby. 

Did the rain drop over the entire planet? 


Biblically speaking, rain rains upon certain land because according to the Bible the evaporation of water for rain flood is heavily occurring from the ends of the land (that is, from sea, lakes or body of water). 

"When he uttereth his voice, there is a multitude of waters in the heavens; and he causeth the 

vapours 

to ascend from the ends of the earth: he maketh lightnings with rain, and bringeth forth the wind out of his treasures. " - Jeremiah 51:16

Water evaporates from the ends of land (that is, sea, lake, or body of water).

" And said to his servant, Go up now, look toward the sea. And he went up, and looked, and said, There is nothing. And he said, Go again seven times. 
And it came to pass at the seventh time, that he said, Behold, there ariseth a little 

cloud out of the sea, 

like a man's hand. And he said, Go up, say unto Ahab, Prepare thy chariot, and get thee down, that the rain stop thee not. 
And it came to pass in the mean while, that the 

heaven was black with clouds

 and wind, and there was a great rain. . ." - 1 Kings 18:43-45

And when evaporation happened, the clouds of heaven would be filled with water of rain. 

"If the clouds be full of rain, they empty themselves upon the earth: ... " 
- Ecclesiastes 11:3

"For he maketh small the drops of water: they pour down rain according to the vapour thereof: Which the clouds do drop and distil upon man abundantly. " - Job 36:27-28

Rain drops to a certain earth (land) and not necessarily to the entire planet, biblically speaking.

" And it came to pass after many days, that the word of the LORD came to Elijah in the third year, saying, Go, shew thyself unto Ahab; and I will send 

rain upon the earth. " - 1 Kings 18:1

"Who  giveth rain upon the earth, and sendeth waters upon the fields: " - Job 5:10

"To  cause it to rain on the earth, where no man is; on the wilderness, wherein there is no man; " - Job 38:26

In the case of Noah's flood, the rain dropped on the earth of Ararat's mountains. 

" Who covereth the heaven with clouds, who prepareth 

rain

 for the earth, who maketh grass to grow upon the mountains. " - Psalms 147:8

Since there are many snow on the high mountains in Armenia, it's expected that it melts at certain season or reason. 

" For as the rain cometh down, and the 

snow

 from heaven, and returneth not thither, but watereth the earth, ... " - Isaiah 55:10 (KJV)

The usual flood of Tigris-Euphrates rivers may come in early April to June, and the Noah's flood dates it on what our calendar says May 20 - June 30, 2029 BCE.


The water became 26 feet upward, and the waters became strong. If Noah was measuring from the ground to the surface of the flood, then it means that the flood was 3 floor high. Mt. Ararat this time was just twin hills, not as high as it is today. 
(For illustration)

" ... the flood came forth.
Its power came upon the peoples like a battle,

one person did not see another,

they could not recognize each other in the catastrophe.
The flood belowed like a bull,
and like a screaming eagle was the sound of the wind.
The sun was not seen, the darkness was dense."
 - Atrahasis 3.10-17

The thickness of the water (rain) covered the sky that people could not see each other, and Noah could not sea the high twin mountains (Mashu/Masis) on the north.  


"... waykusu (and covered) 
kal- (whole)
he-harim (the dual-hills)
ha-gabohim (high)
'aser (that)
tahat ([were] under)
kal- (whole)
ha-shamayim (the sky-clouds/heavens)." - Genesis 7:19b

The passage is telling us that the waters of rain falling from clouds had 

"... covered the whole 

he-harim ha-gabohim" 
(high dual-hills

that were under the whole lofty-waters (sky)."

Josephus impliedly understood 

"he-harim "
 (the hills) 

as referring to the Twin High Mountains near the vicinity of the flooded area. And in Akkadian, this "Twin Mountain" is called "Mashu," which is referring to what the modern writers called "Mt. Ararat." 


This may mean that Josephus understood the suffix

 "-im"

 in "harim" as a short form of 

dual suffix

 "-ayim." 

Babylonian or Assyrian writers, if considering this passage, may understood

 "he-harim ha-gabohim" as a 

High Twin Mountain, 

and in fact that was also how they depicted Mashu on their seal. 

Our understanding of 

"ha-shamayim" as

 "lofty-waters" 
(clouds-of-sky)

 in this very passage is derived from the first part of the passage, saying that the "waters became strong more & more upon the earth (land)."

That is, Genesis 7:19 in effect, is saying, heavy falling waters were covering the whole Mashu (Mt. Ararat) under the lofty-waters (clouds).


In history, Strabo (63 BCE - AD 23) reported :

"And it is said, that in ancient times the Araxes in Armenia, after descending from the mountains, spread out and formed a 

sea

 in the plains below,..." - Geography 16.14.13

And in the Bible, such this spreading out of Lesser Araske river's water, is said to happen in "mountains of Ararat," in the region called by Isaiah 37:38 as

 " 'eretz ararath" ("earth of Ararat"). 

Both Atrahasis and the Bible agree that it was a river flood by fountains and rain. Neither the Bible has mentioned it as an ocean flood. 

Only later, during the 9th century BCE it was probably described as a sea flood by Gilgamesh Epic because such sea or lake was still there on the southern foot of Mt. Ararat until the time of Herodotus (c.484 - c.425 BCE). 

According to Josephus,
 Noah's ark drew near to the highest mountain of Armenia, and then landed on APOBATERION, Greek of the Armenian phrase "Nakhnakan Ichevan (which means, First Landing Site) in Carra, border of Nor-Shirakan (Adiabene), Iran in ancient  Zaranda-Bari, in what we called today near Ziyaret Dag

(For illustration)

After 40 days of flood rain, the flood continued for 110 days until it abated on the 150th day. 

ARAB ARABIA ARABAH

SAUDI ARABIA: the phrase " Saudi Arabia " was officially invented on 23 September AD 1932 by its founder, Abdulaziz b...