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Poster Handle Chromatophore
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Do you like the epic of Gilgamesh? Lol
It is not a contest as there is vast history within every scope of culture upon earth for eons with actual people and locations matching written and oral history. It is found by many advanced religious scholars that spiritual wisdom no matter the culture does not contradict no matter the beliefs.
 Quoting: Chromatophore

Show us something from it that PROVES that it has the correct details.

Like this.

1. God told Noah to build an Ark because He was going to Flood the world.
- Marine fossils on dry land all over the world.

- The Bible says the Ark landed in Ararat. It's there.

Thread: Noah - The Ark and the Flood - Evidence Proof Bible History
 Quoting: Servant-of-the-LORD


The great walls of Uruk were found.

Have you heard of Atrahasis?
If talking flood of the world, Gilgamesh meeting Utanapishtim, the survivor of the flood shows he survived by not eternal life but by a plant that renewed his youth. Alas the forbidden fruit stolen by the snake in the epic tale with no eve within it.
The language of the h-brews is quite young shown by scholars which says through being influenced by cultures around them as well as their origin stories.


Demolish the house, build a boat!

Abandon riches and seek survival!

Ea tells Utanapishtim how to build the boat. The riddle of the flood/deluge.


[link to en.wikipedia.org (secure)]

Atra-Hasis (Akkadian:romanized: Atra-ḫasīs) is an 18th-century BCE Akkadian epic, recorded in various versions on clay tablets,[1] named for its protagonist, Atrahasis ('exceedingly wise'). The Atra-Hasis tablets include both a creation myth and one of three surviving Babylonian flood myths. The name "Atra-Hasis" also appears, as king of Shuruppak in the times before a flood, on one of the Sumerian King Lists.

The oldest known copy of the epic tradition concerning Atrahasis can be dated by colophon (scribal identification) to the reign of Hammurabi’s great-grandson, Ammi-Saduqa (1646–1626 BC). However, various Old Babylonian fragments exist, and the epic continued to be copied into the first millennium BC.

The story of Atrahasis also exists in a later Assyrian version, first rediscovered in the Library of Ashurbanipal, though its translations have been uncertain due to the artifact being in fragmentary condition and containing ambiguous words. Nonetheless, its fragments were first assembled and translated by George Smith as The Chaldean Account of Genesis, the hero of which had his name corrected to Atra-Hasis by Heinrich Zimmern in 1899.

Taking place, according to its incipit, “when gods were in the ways of men," Tablet I of Atra-Hasis contains the creation myth of Anu, Enlil, and Enki—the Sumerian gods of sky, wind, and water. Following the cleromancy ('casting of lots'), the sky is ruled by Anu, Earth by Enlil, and the freshwater sea by Enki.



Remembering Yahweh is a weather and war deity so it is fitting for flood. Flood myths extend into the Americas with survivors as well. Ararat is also a mountain 300 miles from mount nisir. The actual ark being found is not acknowledged by academia today and say it is pseudoarchaeology.
 
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