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Triadic Healing Part #5 : True History And The Purification Of History
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Nebuchadnezzar I[b][c] (/nɛbjʊkədˈnɛzər/), reigned c. 1121–1100 BC, was the fourth king of the Second Dynasty of Isin and Fourth Dynasty of Babylon. He ruled for 22 years according to the Babylonian King List C,[i 2] and was the most prominent monarch of this dynasty. He is best known for his victory over Elam and the recovery of the cultic idol of Marduk.

Anna’s Hypothesis : In Ancient persia, they believed that the Statues were the embodiment of The God. Marduk was in his Statue. 

When Nebuchadnezzar I brought in the Statue, he brought in Marduk. 

“The Curse of Marduk.” That is what this feels like. 

 

Quote From Wikipedia

The Enmeduranki legend, or the Seed of kingship,[i 5] is a Sumero-Akkadian composition relating his endowment with perfect wisdom (nam-kù-zu) by the god Marduk and his claim to belong to a “distant line of kingship from before the flood” and to be an “offspring of Enmeduranki, king of Sippar.” It begins with a lament over preceding events:

At that time, in the reign of a previous king, conditions changed. Good departed and evil was regular,[d] The lord became angry and got furious. He gave the command and the gods of the land abandoned it […] its people were incited to commit crime. The guardians of peace became furious, and went up to the dome of heaven, the spirit of justice stood aside. …who guards living beings, prostrated the people, they all became like those who have no god. Evil demons filled the land, the namtar-demon […] they penetrated the cult centers. The land diminished, its fortunes changed. The wicked Elamite, who did not hold (the land’s) treasures in esteem, […] his battle, his attack was swift. He devastated the habitations, he made them into a ruin, he carried off the gods, he ruined the shrines.[4]

— The seed of kingship, lines 15-24.
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