Noah

Gundestrup Caldron Panel of the Boar-Holding Men. The loops of the beard are similar to those of Shem as depicted in the Hirshnatur panel, linking Noah and Shem as in Genesis 9, in the Babylonian tradition of Apse and Mummu, and in the Ugaritic tradition of Dagan and Aliyan Bal. Noah holds Shem in his right hand (in the left of the image) and in turn Shem holds his heir, Arphaxad. In his left hand Noah holds Japheth who in turn holds his heir, Seba. Arphaxad and Seba respectively represent the complementary lands of Sumer and Elam, located on either side of the Lower Tigris, the fiefs of the White and Black Matriarchs respectively. Shem and Japheth are full brothers, sons of the White Matriarch, Uma (Jobab) of the Caucasoid family of Cain, of the antediluvian land of Hiddekel-Tigris. The Black Matriarch, the royal wife of Japheth, mothered Seba. The leaping dog in the Sumerian sector represents Noah's post-diluvian daughter by the Yellow Matriarch in keeping with the dog image portraying the Sumerian deity of Bau (Nininsina). The winged horse in the Elam sector represents Noah's post-diluvian daughter by the Red Matriarch, remembered in the Sumerian pantheon as Shenirda (Akkadian Aia), the wife of the sun god Utu (Akkadian Shamash). This daughter in the East Indian pantheon is Ganga, the personification of the River Ganges. The grouping of Japheth's black son Seba with Noah's red daughter recreates the red-black alliance of antediluvian "Havilah and Cush," and anticipates the marriage of Seba (East Indian Shiva) to Ganga. The fief of the Black Matriarch, Elam, was the regional stepping stone to Dravidian India and greater Arabia.

Ancestry

• Of the Sethite or Asian line of Adam's family.

Dates

• 3118 BC. Noah's birth, 600 years before the Flood, in the Sethite Far East.
• 2638 BC. Noah begins gathering the four wives of the Ark from the four racial lines of Adam's family.
• 2578 BC. Noah begins his antediluvian reign as Ziusudra of Shuruppak as recorded in the opening section of the Sumerian King List.
• 2518 BC. Noah begins establishing the Ural-Altaic linguistic stock in the land of Subaria on the Upper Tigris.
• 2359 BC. After Noah reestablishes the antediluvian city of Eridu, Sidon (Canaan's son) destroys Noah's authority as priest of the heaven god An and transfers the Anship to his father, Canaan.
• 2168 BC. Noah's death.

Charism

• Ziusudra of Shuruppak, beginning in 2578 BC.
• Priest of the heaven god An, original designer of the Noahic cosmos.
• Kudai Bai Ülgön (Bai-Ulgan) as remembered by the Ural-Altaic linguistic stock.
• Alalu in the Hurrian text, the Song of Kumarbi, whose adversary is Anu (Canaan). Canaan also appears as Anu in the Marduk Epic
• Ziusudra the Faraway in the Epic of Gilgamesh where he tells Eber the story of the Flood. Eber's visit to Ziusudra may have happened in Colchis where Noah and his black children Riphath and Arvad took refuge after the Uruk-Aratta war.
• Noah and his black children Riphath and Arvad appear as the royal family of Colchis in the Hellenic Argonautica.
• Indra and Didanu, lord of the Marut-Amorties.
• Sumerian ruler Kudda shortly before his death in 2168 BC.

Legacy

• Established the Ural-Altaic linguistic stock in the land of Subaria on the Upper Tigris immediately after the Flood in 2518 BC.
• Offended by Ham and Ham's family behavior, Noah's cursed Ham's heir Canaan, transferring control of Ham's "Semitic" (Canaanite) linguistic stock to Shem. Canaan's son Sidon who (in his power as high priest of the wisdom god Enki) retaliated, destroying Noah's authority as priest of An.