Friday, August 7, 2015

Jesus' Jews No Speak Pig Hebrew:Ancient Ritual Bath Found in Jerusalem with Aramaic Graffiti

Jesus' Jews  No Speak Pig Hebrew:Ancient Ritual Bath Found in Jerusalem with Aramaic Graffiti



Examples of written Aramaic from the time of the Second Temple are very rare,” reports Haaretz. “The use of Aramaic on the walls suggests that it was the common language of the time, which could strengthen the argument that Jesus spoke Aramaic, as opposed to Hebrew.

Read more: http://www.ancient-origins.net/news-history-archaeology/ancient-ritual-bath-found-jerusalem-aramaic-graffiti-it-003560#ixzz3iCH6TRPY 

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Aramaic alphabet and writing pre-dates Hebrew and was probably  the model for Hebrew and even Indian Sanskrit writing systems.that followed.



Ancient Indian and Hebrew Language Connection?

www.viewzone.com/matlock.html

Kod and Khad are Sanskrit terms for "First," "The Beginning," or "God. .... The Hebrewsquare alphabet and the truth that Hebrew is just an Aramaic dialect ...

Ancient Scripts: Avestan

www.ancientscripts.com/avestan.html

The Avestan alphabet was modelled on the Pahlavi script, which in turn was derived ... the shape of the letters are cursive like those in contemporary Aramaic scripts. ... In fact, the oldest Avestan is so similar to the oldest Sanskrit that you can ...


Story image for aramaic hebrew script from BBC News

'Ancient Hebrew inscriptions' baffle Israeli archaeologists

BBC News-Aug 5, 2015
On its walls were letters in Aramaic - the common language spoken in the time of Jesus - written in Hebrew script, and a series of symbols either smeared on ...




Brahmi script - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brahmi_script

Wikipedia
An origin in Semitic scripts (usually Phoenician or Aramaic) has been proposed ... :377Sanskrit was not written until many centuries later, and as a result, the original ... a reversed κ, looks a lot like Aramaic aleph, which resembled Hebrew א.

Aramaic alphabet - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aramaic_alphabet

Wikipedia
Among the scripts in modern use, the Hebrew alphabet bears the closest relation ...script, ancestor of the Brahmic family of scripts, which includes Devanagari.

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Story image for aramaic from Ancient Origins

Ancient Ritual Bath Found in Jerusalem with Aramaic Graffiti on it

Ancient Origins-7 hours ago
The graffiti inscriptions appear to have been written in Aramaic, though archaeologists studying the site say it is hard to read them. “Examples of ...

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And what were these infidels doing in Isra-Hell 5000 years ago ?When are their ancestors going to claim it from the 'modern' white Euro Trash HeJews?


http://www.ancient-origins.net/news-history-archaeology/5000-year-old-musical-scene-found-pottery-israel-020416


5,000-year-old musical scene found on pottery in Israel

5,000-year-old musical scene found on pottery in Israel may reflect sacred marriage ritual

Archaeologists from the Israel Antiquities Authority working at Bet Ha-‘Emeq have discovered a shard from an early Bronze Age storage vessel depicting scenes from what seems to be a ‘sacred marriage’ ritual. The images are on a 5,000 year old seal which may be one of the world’s oldest depictions of musicians.
All the figures are female. One of them is playing a musical instrument similar to a harp which may be a lyre. The instrument, the name of which is Greek (λύρα, lýra), is known primarily from its use in classical Greece. It is similar to a harp but a lot smaller. It has seven strings and the earliest known image of one is that which appears in the sarcophagus of Hagia Triada, a Minoan settlement in Crete. The instrument was usually played with a plectrum and was also depicted in various mythological scenes. According to Greek myth it was originally invented by the god Hermes who stole a herd of sacred cattle when he was young. He made the lyre from the entrails of one of the cows using a tortoise shell as a soundbox.
Woman playing a lyra from the sarcophagus of Hagia Triada
Woman playing a lyra from the sarcophagus of Hagia Triada (Wikimedia Commons)
The archaeologists believe the scene may depict the musical interlude in a ritual known as ‘the sacred marriage’, popularly believed to include feasting, music and sex.
The ‘sacred marriage’ was a ritual that took place between a Mesopotamian king and a ‘goddess’, who was usually a priestess. Modern neo-pagans believe the ritual to date back to prehistory, on the basis of a vase found at Uruk dating from before the 4th Millennium. The ritual is most commonly associated with the story of the goddess Inanna and her consort, Dumuzi and the idea was that the sexual union between the god and goddess brought on the harvest by keeping the land fertile. For this reason, it is believed, many ancient societies re-enacted the ritual, with a king playing the part of Dumuzi and a priestess (but sometimes also a high status prostitute) playing the part of Inanna. Neo-pagans also believe, perhaps not incorrectly, that the same ritual may have been performed in Celtic societies at the solstices and equinoxes, although how accurate this actually is remains hotly debated.
The Babylonian Marriage Market by Edwin Long
The Babylonian Marriage Market by Edwin Long (Wikimedia Commons)
The ritual was described by J. Stuckey in 2005:
From extant hymns, we can piece together what happened in the ritual. First, Inanna was bathed, perfumed, and adorned, while Dumuzi and his retinue processed towards her shrine. The famous Uruk vase may represent this procession. All the while, temple personnel sang love songs, many of which are extant. Resplendent Inanna greeted Dumuzi at the door, which, on the Uruk vase, is flanked by her signature standards (gateposts), and there he presented her with sumptuous gifts. Subsequently, the pair seated themselves on thrones, although sometimes the enthronement took place only after sexual consummation. The deities entered a chamber fragrant with spices and decorated with costly draperies. Lying down on a ceremonial bed constructed for the occasion, they united in sexual intercourse. Afterwards, pleased by and with her lover, Inanna decreed long life and sovereignty for him and fertility and prosperity for the land.
The fragment from Bet Ha-‘Emeq was actually discovered in the 1970’s and the images on it were probably made using a cylinder seal, an implement that was rolled along the wet clay creating a series of repeating designs.
An engraving of a band on a piece of pottery, made by a 5,000-year-old seal is thought to be the most ancient musical scene in the world.
An engraving of a band on a piece of pottery, made by a 5,000-year-old seal is thought to be the most ancient musical scene in the world. Credit: Israel Antiquities Authority
Dr Yitzhak Paz, Dr Ianir Milevski and Nimrod Getzov, of the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) believe that the images form the oldest known representation of a musical performance. They think that this is the first time in which it has definitely been possible to identify a figure playing an instrument on a seal impression dating from the third millennium BC.
“It seems that the rare seal impression, which appeared on a fragment of a large storage vessel, sheds light on the symbolic-ritualistic world of the early Bronze Age inhabitants in Israel” the archaeologists told The Daily Mail. “The importance of the scene lies in the possible symbolic context, it being part of a complex ritual known in Mesopotamia as the "sacred marriage. 'In this ceremony a symbolic union took place between the king and a goddess (actually represented by a priestess). The ceremony included several rites: music and dancing, a banquet, a meeting between the king and the goddess and an act of sexual congress between them.”
Many seal impressions from the early Bronze Age show the same rite, according to Professor Pierre de Miroschedji of the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) in Paris.
There are many ancient sites around Bet Ha-‘Emeq, including an ancient Canaanite palace, a Neolithic site dating back to the Qaraoun culture, a submerged Neolithic village off the coast of Atlit, the remains of a fortified city called Hazor, the ancient city of Megiddo (which gave rise to the word ‘armageddon’) and the Biblical village of Capernaum which was said to be the home of St Peter. Bet Ha-‘Emeq itself was discovered in 1973 by R. Frankel. An excavation was carried out that revealed remains dating to the Late Chalcolithic period in the Early Bronze Age as well as the Persian period. Five burial caves were excavated to the west of the site in 1992.
Featured image: The impression shows  three female figures (illustrated), one of whom is seated and playing an ancient harp-like instrument called a lyre. Credit: Israel Antiquities Authority.


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Highly Cited-Discovery News-Aug 5, 2015








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