Thread: This is a very interesting seal from the Babylonian period (I presume first half of the 2nd millennium BC), currently in the Penn museum. penn.museum/collections/ob…
It is one of several seals kept in this museum which show "the judgment of the birdman"...

penn.museum/collections/ob…
The birdman, who has head, arms, chest of a man and the body, legs, feet, wings and tail of a bird, is led by a divine officer, with clasped hands, wearing a long skirt. From behind, he is pushed by the second divine officer, who carries a club, and short skirt...
At the end of the procession, a human worshiper, with bare head, short hair, long beard and plaited skirt brings a kid (baby goat) as an offering...
He is probably a king. I explained why here:
The birdman is brought before the seated Enki/Ea, who is surrounded by streams, with fish swiming along the stream towards him...He is holding a round vase in his left hand....Above him is a crescent moon pointing upward and stars...
Very cool...What does this mean? To figure this out, we need to look at another, much older and much cooler seal. This one, apparently from Nipur, and dated to before 3000BC depicts "the judgment of the bird, not the birdman"... penn.museum/sites/journal/…
The eagle is captured by two divine attendants and probably brought in judgment before Enki/Ea. The bird – this time not a birdman – is fighting with claws and wings to free himself...
One attendant has caught him by the leg and kneels down as if to avoid his wings and beak. The other stands up and grasps one flapping wing while striking him with a short club...
A third officer leads in front with a club on his shoulder. All have the horned mitre, the symbol of divine officers, their hair tied in a loop behind, and flounced skirt leaving bare the upper body...
Soooo??? Remember my article about ferns, feathers, lightning, feather/fern like lightning scars and thunder gods? oldeuropeanculture.blogspot.com/2019/09/pero.h…
In it, I talked about Ninurta/Ningirsu, Sumerian thunder god, who was in the earliest times imagined as a huge black bird, with outstretched wings...An eagle (vulture)...The Thunderbird....
"...and when Gudea sees the god Ninurta/Ningirsu in a dream the god still has the wings of his old form, the Thunderbird..."
And I then talked about the evolution of the eagle (thunderbird), into the eagle man (birdman), and then further into a thunder god (who can transform into an eagle, can ride on an eagle or has eagle as his sacred animal, avatar)...
Could the birdman on the Babylonian seals be Ninurta/Ningirsu in his old birdman form? And could this bird on the Nipur seal be also Ninurta/Ningirsu in his oldest, thunderbird form?
But why would Ninurta/Ningirsu be arrested and brought before Enki/Ea to be judged? Well, remember my article about Ninurta and the turtle? oldeuropeanculture.blogspot.com/2021/05/ninurt…
There is a "weird" Sumerian text called "Ninurta and the turtle". In it, the Rain god Ninurta contemplates to overthrow the Flood god Enki. Enki gets the wind of it, and then unleashes a deadly turtle, which digs a huge hole and drags Ninurta into it...
This apparently nonsensical story makes a lot of sense, when you look at Ninurta, Enki and the turtle as calendar markers.
The climatic year in Mesopotamia is divided into two halves: summer, hot and dry half (Apr/May-Oct/Nov) and winter, cool and wet half (Oct/Nov-Apr/May)...
The winter starts in Oct/Nov, with the rain, brought by the rain god Ninurta...And right at that time vultures start their mating season...Huge eagles with outstretched wings gliding below the gathering clouds performing their mating ritual flights...
And it ends in Apr/May...With the flood, brought by the flood god Enki...And right at the end of the rains season, at the peak of the flood, the Mesopotamian softshell turtles start digging huge holes in river and canal banks to lay their eggs...
The rain season starts with the beginning of the vulture mating season and ends with the beginning of the flood and the turtle mating season...Turtle drags eagle into the hole in the ground...Rain season ends. Flood starts...Enki overpowers Ninurta...
This is what "Ninurta and the turtle" story symbolically depicts. So "imprisoning" of the the bird and the birdman, and bringing them to be judged by Enki/Ea, is another symbolic depiction of Enki/Ea overpowering Ninurta/Ningirsu...
The moon pointing up is another sign that we are talking about winter, the rain season...I talked more about this here. oldeuropeanculture.blogspot.com/2020/06/7-star… I think, that moon points up between Ninurta (beginning of rain season) and Enki (end of the rain season). Hence moon being so important
So my hunch, that the names of all these "Per" thunder gods: Slavic Perun, Baltic Perkūnas/Pērkons, Finnish Perkele, Albanian Perëndi, Indian Parjanya, Thracian Περκων/Περκος, are derived from PIE "*perH-" meaning feather, wing, to fly, just got more support...Amazing really...

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More from @serbiaireland

29 May
Thread: Allegedly, in the rural areas of Sardinia, killing of the suffering terminally ill people was still a common practice until the 1st half of the 20th century. The killing was done by Accabadora, a woman called in by the family of the ill person to help him die quickly... Image
She would either strangle the dying person, suffocate him/her with a pillow, or kill him/her by striking the head with a special wooden mallet made from olive wood, called Malteddhu... Image
"When I started doing research on this topic it was 1981. - explains Piergiacomo Pala, author of Anthology of Femina Agabbadòra and director of the Galluras Ethnographic Museum - Nobody wanted to talk about it. It was a real taboo"...
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26 May
Thread: While we are talking about horses:

Ahura-Mazda in a circle "worshiped" 🙂 by two rampant horses, below a flying sun disk with tail and streamers. Impression of the stone seal of Ellil-mukîn-aplu son of Nasir. 413 BC. Penn Museum...

What does this really mean?
The natural breeding season of horses typically begins around mid-April and finishes around mid September...It is marked by wild stallion fights for mares...

oldeuropeanculture.blogspot.com/2020/06/trojan…
oldeuropeanculture.blogspot.com/2020/09/unicor…
Horses sexual drive is governed by the sun and it peaks on summer solstice...I heard summer solstice was a big thing for sun worshipers....

So prancing ponies under the sun disc...Interesting...
Read 4 tweets
26 May
Thread: Is there any link between the horses and dolphins? Well there is...Their mating seasons...
Bottlenose dolphin female fertility peaks in June, male fertility peaks in July"..."Gestation last 12 months"...Which means that it is June-July when most dolphin babies are born too...Not something you would easily miss, if you are a sailor...
I talked about the significance of this in this thread
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25 May
Thread: One of several gold and silver statuettes of a worshipper (probably a king) carrying a sacrificial goat. Susa, Iran, c. 1500–1200 BC (Middle Elamite period)...The statuette is really cool, but this next thing is even cooler: Image
"...in order to make the neglected rites appear magnificently, in order to restore Nippur, as the lead GOAT of the nation"...
This is an excerpt from an inscription of Ur-Ninurta (1859 – 1832 BC) found in Nippur, which commemorates setting up of a bronze image of the king holding a votive goat...

books.google.ie/books?id=u2nUT…
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24 May
Thread: A very very interesting Old Babylonian cylinder seal, circa 1700-1600BC. The official description:
"A supplicant (the one who prays to god), wearing long robe, stands before a deity. The deity is standing with one foot resting on a lying animal (?), holding a staff with elaborate top part, which is positioned directly under a crescent and circle with an inscribed cross"...
There are three lines of cuneiform text reading: "Nin-Subur (Ninshubur), wise in all things, have mercy on me" en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ninshubur
Read 14 tweets

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