The 50 Historical Names Of Nibiru (Marduk)

nebiru

The 50 Historical Names Of Nibiru (Marduk)

Folks, lately I’ve been fascinated… by the Sumerian version of the creation of our solar system and Hatonn’s interpretation and insights…

Apparently there may have been over 50 names of Marduk which is supposedly another name for Nibiru…

The fifty names of Marduk

Leonard W. King in The Seven Tablets of Creation (1902) included fragments of god lists which he considered essential for the reconstruction of the meaning of Marduk’s name. Franz Bohl in his 1936 study of the fifty names also referred to King’s list. Richard Litke (1958) noticed a similarity between Marduk’s names in the An:Anum list and those of the Enuma elish, albeit in a different arrangement. The connection between the An:Anum list and the list in Enuma Elish were established by Walther Sommerfeld (1982), who used the correspondence to argue for a Kassite period composition date of the Enuma elish, although the direct derivation of the Enuma elish list from the An:Anum one was disputed in a review by Wilfred Lambert (1984).[10]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marduk#The_fifty_names_of_Marduk

I glance over the names, most of which do not look familiar, and bingo….

49.The Forty-Ninth Name is NEBIRU.”

http://www.lovecraft.ru/texts/necro/simon_eng/names50.html

That reminds me of how many words northern natives  have for snow… lots!  That’s because snow significantly shapes their reality in a profound way.

“Central Siberian Yupik has 40 such terms, while the Inuit dialect spoken in Canada’s Nunavik region has at least 53, including “matsaaruti,” for wet snow that can be used to ice a sleigh’s runners, and “pukak,” for the crystalline powder snow that looks like salt.

For many of these dialects, the vocabulary associated with sea ice is even richer. In the Inupiaq dialect of Wales, Alaska, Krupnik documented about 70 terms for ice that mark such distinctions as: “utuqaq,” ice that lasts year after year; “siguliaksraq,” the patchwork layer of crystals that forms as the sea begins to freeze; and “auniq,” ice that is filled with holes, like Swiss cheese. It is not just the Eskimo languages that have colorful terms to describe their frosty surroundings: The Sami people, who live in the northern tips of Scandinavia and Russia, use at least 180 words related to snow and ice, according to Ole Henrik Magga, a linguist in Norway. (Unlike Inuit dialects, Sami ones are not polysynthetic, making it easier to distinguish words.)”

http://articles.washingtonpost.com/2013-01-14/national/36344037_1_eskimo-words-snow-inuit

The symbol for “Nebiru” resembles the orbit too don’t ya feel?

How Nibiru Shaped Our Solar System According To The Sumerians, And ET Commander Hatonn (PS… It’s Back!)

https://indianinthemachine.wordpress.com/2013/10/31/how-nibiru-shaped-our-solar-system-according-to-the-sumerians-and-et-commander-hatonn-ps-its-back/

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