| 
			  
			
 
  by Robert Bedrosian
 
			from
			
			RBedrosian Website 
			
			Spanish version 
			  
			  
			  
			  
				
					
						| 
						Robert Bedrosian 
						received a Ph.D. from Columbia University's Department 
						of Middle East Languages and Cultures in 1979. |  
				
					
						
							
							
 
 "Method, you comprehend! Method! Arrange your facts. 
							Arrange your ideas. And if some little fact will not 
							fit in - do not reject it but consider it closely. 
							Though its significance escapes you, be sure that it 
							is significant."
 
							Hercule Poirot 
							in Agatha Christie's 
							Murder on the Links (1923).  
			  
			  
			Ancient primary sources contain a 
			suggestion that extraterrestrials or intelligent non-humans had some 
			role in early human history.  
			  
			It is a suggestion which derives from 
			circumstantial evidence. Based on currently available written 
			sources, a proof is not possible. The nature of the primary sources 
			themselves is responsible for this situation, since all written 
			literary sources relevant to the topic describe the early days of 
			humanity and are of a legendary or mythological nature.  
			  
			The relevant primary sources, moreover, 
			are few in number. Nonetheless, within these few sources there are a 
			handful of passages which stand out, seeming to suggest an 
			extraterrestrial or non-human interaction, or at least a presence.
 The question of 
			ancient extraterrestrial interaction 
			with humanity is a fascinating one and has been the partial focus of 
			many books and articles.
 
			  
			The topic received an early and 
			excellent treatment in Intelligent Life in the Universe 
			(1966) co-authored by the noted astronomers I.S. Shklovski 
			and 
			Carl Sagan.  
			  
			In Chapter 33 of that work, "Possible 
			Consequences of Direct Contact," Sagan suggested some criteria for 
			evaluating relevant material of a mythological nature: 
				
				"What guise may we expect such a 
				contact myth to wear? A simple account of the apparition of a 
				strange being who performs marvelous works and resides in the 
				heavens is not quite adequate...   
				Such an unusual occurrence [as 
				extraterrestrial contact] would certainly be described in the 
				legends and myths of the people who came into contact with space 
				voyagers. The astronauts would probably be portrayed as having 
				godlike characteristics and possessing supernatural powers. 
				Special emphasis would be placed on their arrival from the sky, 
				and their subsequent departure back into the sky.    
				These beings may have taught the 
				inhabitants of the Earth useful arts and basic sciences, which 
				would also be reflected in their legends and myths".  (1) 
			A quantitative and qualitative advance 
			in scholarship on the subject was made by the polymath 
			
			Jacques Vallee, who holds a 
			master's degree in astrophysics from the University of Lille and a 
			doctorate in computer science from Northwestern University.  
			  
			In 
						
						
						Passport to Magonia
			(1969) Vallee provided 
			data from historical sources dating from about the 5th century B.C. 
			to the end of the 19th century, as well as earlier mythological 
			material suggesting a continuous extraterrestrial presence on Earth. 
			The subtitle of Passport to Magonia, "On UFOs, Folklore, and 
			Parallel Worlds," reflects other areas explored by Vallee, and by 
			his predecessors, and successors.  
			  
			Vallee and others from the 1960s onward 
			have suggested that psychosocial causes may explain some of the 
			sightings of extraterrestrial beings and UFOs.  
			  
			An additional view which has been 
			advanced is that we are not dealing with extraterrestrials but "ultraterrestrials," 
			entities resident on the earth with us, but which we are unable to 
			catch more than glimpses of due to our limitations as humans, and/or 
			the reluctance of these entities to interact with us. 
			  
			In any case, looked at from these 
			different and fascinating perspectives, potential areas of 
			investigation have expanded to include folklore, "Wonders" books 
			produced in the Middle Ages, Lives of the Saints, and other similar 
			material.  
			  
			Both the data and the method were 
			refined in Vallee's recent Wonders in the Sky (New York, 
			2009), co-authored by Chris Aubeck. In that book, the authors 
			revisited the data presented in Passport to Magonia, eliminating 
			some material and refining and/or adding other material.  
			  
			Especially significant was the expanded 
			attention Aubeck and Vallee devoted to a discussion of method, 
			including rules of inclusion and exclusion of material, and the 
			development of useful descriptive icons or labels for the categories 
			and episodes in the display of their data (2).
 Another important pioneer in the study of early human contact with 
			extraterrestrials is the distinguished scholar Thomas E. Bullard, 
			who holds a doctorate in folklore from Indiana University.
 
			  
			In his excellent article "Anomalous 
			Aerial Phenomena before 1800" he notes that from remote 
			antiquity to about 1800, a supernatural worldview prevailed in which 
			anything out of the ordinary could be attributed to supernatural 
			forces.  
			  
			These included many now-familiar 
			astronomical or meteorological phenomena such as comets, meteors, 
			and parhelia (atmospheric halos).  
			  
			However, he also observed some accounts 
			of phenomena of unusual character and less certain identity:  
				
				wildfire, apparitional phenomena, 
				aerial phenomena associated with the births and deaths of 
				rulers, heroes, and great events, aerial phenomena associated 
				with gods and saints, death-omen lights, supernatural beings 
				including ghosts, witches, will-o'-the-wisps, the Wild Hunt, 
				Fairies, aerial vehicles, and UFO-like phenomena. (3) 
			Bullard notes that the priesthoods of 
			the Greek and Roman world, like their Babylonian predecessors, were 
			always interested in oracles and divination. The surviving texts of 
			some of these oracles are replete with observations of various 
			aerial phenomena.  
			  
			Unlike the priests, however, reliable 
			Greek historians such as, 
				
					
					
					Herodotus
					
					Thucydides
					
					Xenophon, 
			...did not concern themselves with 
			prodigious events, and/or anomalous phenomena.  
			  
			This situation was reversed with later 
			Roman historians such as, 
				
					
					
					Livy
					
					Tacitus
					
					Suetonius
					
					Dio Cassius
					
					Ammianus Marcellinus, 
					 
			...and non-Roman historians in the Roman 
			world such as, 
				
					
					
					Plutarch
					
					Flavius Josephus
					
					Diodorus Siculus, 
			...whose works include unusual phenomena 
			as a matter of course. (4)
 Bullard's important general categorization of the early material was 
			enhanced by his illuminating description of the spirit-filled 
			universe of early and medieval humanity:
 
				
				"A common cosmology of the 
				supernatural era envisioned a tripartite universe.    
				An upper or heavenly level belonged 
				to the gods or powerful high spirits; the middle level was the 
				earth and belonged to humans; the lower level or underworld 
				belonged to the dead or lesser, often malevolent spirits. These 
				levels were never far apart and intersected at some points, such 
				as a mountain or cave.    
				A sacred tree might have its roots 
				in the underworld and its upper branches in heaven. Some spirits 
				shared the earth itself, inhabiting every tree, rock, or stream 
				and interacting with human beings on occasion.    
				Normally invisible or imperceptible 
				beings such as fairies might cohabit the earth in a sort of 
				alternative universe but occasionally appear to mortals. Traffic 
				to and fro between one level and another was also a common way 
				for humans to meet supernatural beings.    
				A vehicle was seldom required for 
				these otherworldly visitors, but the supernatural world view 
				allowed the gods to descend or the dead to arise and exercise 
				influence on earth as a normal, even predictable state of 
				affairs".  (5) 
			Contact between humans and the 
			otherworld took various forms including direct meeting, visions, 
			apparitions, signs and wonders, "prodigies", and "divine 
			providence". (6)
 Bullard's general conclusion is that,
 
				
				"pre-1800 anomalies do not make a 
				case for long-term alien visitation, nor do they necessarily 
				refute it".(7) 
			A classification system which is widely 
			used in studies and discussions of extraterrestrial-human 
			interaction in the modern period was proposed by the astrophysicist
			J. Allen Hynek in 1972.  
			  
			Hynek described three types of contact 
			with extraterrestrials: close encounters of the first, second, and 
			third kinds (CE1, CE2, CE3), the last being the most extensive.
			 
			  
			All three categories included an 
			unidentified flying object or aerial phenomenon of some type. 
			(8)
 Parallel to the scholarly works mentioned above, many popular works 
			of a pseudo-scientific nature appeared especially from the mid 1960s 
			on. In some cases, these works were spawned by the more serious 
			works.
 
			  
			Characteristic of this genre are the 
			writings of Erich von Däniken, Immanuel Velikovsky, and Zechariah 
			Sitchin.  
			  
			These works, which have a broader and 
			often eclectic focus, usually devote some space to the topic of 
			extraterrestrial interaction with early humanity. However, much of 
			this material is written from the standpoint of advocacy and is 
			characterized by an unwillingness or inability to distinguish 
			between primary and secondary sources, the intermingled presentation 
			of data, speculation, and conclusions, as well as the amalgamation 
			of information on a variety of unexplained or unusual phenomena into 
			an investigation that purports to examine a single topic.  
			  
			Often these works lack primary source 
			references and cite other secondary sources for their evidence, and 
			not infrequently the ultimate reference turns out to be a 
			"crypto-reference," based on nothing at all.  
			  
			This lack of method and reliability 
			fatally compromises these works for anyone interested in conducting 
			an impartial examination of the topic of extraterrestrial 
			involvement in ancient human history. Indeed, it was our 
			dissatisfaction with the caliber of such popular secondary sources, 
			as well as our familiarity with the primary sources, that prompted 
			us to write the present essay.  
			  
			Other motivations included a desire to 
			investigate some materials not considered by others, and the 
			excitement of an adventure.  
			  
			Aubeck, Bullard, Sagan, Shklovski, and 
			Vallee all called for professional historians, anthropologists, 
			philologists, folklorists and others to give serious attention in 
			their research to the question of extraterrestrial involvement with 
			early humanity.  
			  
			Though this has not happened to any 
			great extent, it is important to note that regarding the most 
			ancient period, the treatment already provided by these scientists 
			and scholars, though abbreviated, is of the highest order. They made 
			use of the best translations of the primary sources then available 
			and provided full references for the secondary source material.
			 
			  
			Their classifications, analyses, 
			conclusions, and even their musings are important and constitute 
			examples of innovative investigative research and scholarship at its 
			best. We benefitted enormously from their works, and also from the 
			important writings of author and encyclopedist Jerome Clark.
			 
			  
			The Western metaphor of "dwarfs, 
			standing on the shoulders of giants" certainly applies to the 
			present writer - in its "non-extraterrestrial" sense.
 Even though our topic is a narrow one, because it has become linked 
			to a welter of non-standard phenomena, it unfortunately has acquired 
			the aura associated with them. It is for this reason that graduate 
			students and non-tenured professors who are interested in academic 
			employment in disciplines such as history and anthropology avoid the 
			topic.
 
			  
			Regrettably, the avoidance of the topic 
			by academics denies us the fruit of their expertise, and also denies 
			such qualified specialists themselves the opportunity to reflect on 
			matters of methodology.  
			  
			For it is in considering the most 
			elusive topics seriously that historians and others may hone and 
			develop their analytical skills. This fruit, though hard to reach, 
			is especially delicious. The work involves conducting an 
			investigation, not attempting proofs.  
			  
			The material needs to be treated with 
			exactly the same rigor and respect accorded to more conventional 
			topics.  
			  
			Because the topic itself is so 
			unorthodox to the scholarly community, the methodology employed for 
			studying it must be entirely orthodox - that is to say, it must 
			comport with the rules of evidence found in traditional scholarly 
			studies.  
			  
			Any conclusions presented must be based 
			on a reasonable interpretation of the evidence examined in the 
			study. Speculative implications, when advanced, should be clearly 
			identified as such and expressed in the most cautious language.
			 
			  
			Concluding that nothing can be concluded 
			is a valid conclusion, and one worthy of respect if the 
			investigation is fairly and properly conducted. 
			  
			***
 
 
			Before proceeding to a discussion of the relevant primary sources, a 
			few general remarks about the sources are in order. On what bases 
			are we including or excluding material? Let us start with the 
			exclusions.
 
 As we are dealing solely with written sources, we exclude 
			archaeological material, interpretations of which can be highly 
			subjective.
 
 We have excluded sources of questionable provenance/authenticity and 
			interpretation. The so-called Tulli papyrus is an example of the 
			first type: it is an illegitimate "ancient" source, a 20th century 
			hoax.
 
			  
			
			
			The Popol Vuh, a tantalizing Mayan 
			legend about visitors from the stars, has been excluded because of 
			likely contamination by contact with Europeans.  
			  
			The
			
			story of Atlantis also has been 
			excluded, in this case because of questionable interpretation. 
			Though found in authentic sources (Plato's dialogues Timaeus, and 
			Critias, ca. 360 B.C.) the texts themselves do not mention 
			extraterrestrials of any kind, or even superhumans.  
			  
			Atlantis' cities were guarded by towers 
			and gates, not unlike the cities of Greece. Ultimately, it actually 
			was defeated in battle by the Athenians, assuming that this is 
			history and not legend. Suggestions that Atlantis was a 
			technologically advanced society with deadly weapons were advanced 
			by 19-20th century psychics such as Helena Blatavsky, Ignatius 
			Donnelly, and Edgar Caycee, and are not at all supported or even 
			suggested by Plato's text.  
			  
			We have here a legitimate ancient 
			reference adopted by a later era and imbued with a meaning not found 
			in the original text - a not infrequently observed phenomenon.
 Written primary sources which have been included in this study were 
			selected because their narrations involve non-human, superior 
			entities and contain unusual details. The
			
			presence of UFOs could not be a 
			selection criterion here (as it is in more extensive works), since 
			requiring a spaceship would entirely eliminate the earliest written 
			material.
 
			  
			Requiring a spaceship would also rule 
			out much of the folkloric material, which may suggest cohabitation 
			with us of non-human, superior entities (perhaps ultraterrestrials) 
			rather than the arrival on Earth of extraterrestrials.
 Among the sources included in this study are:
 
				
				Berosus' account of the Oannes 
				entities, and Mesopotamian and Biblical narratives on the 
				creation/destruction of humanity, including mention of 
				interbreeding with the creator entities.  
			For the sake of completeness, the 
			airship supposedly described in the book of Ezekiel is briefly 
			introduced and referenced.  
			  
			This material must be used with the 
			greatest caution for several reasons. First, though some of these 
			sources concern themselves with the "history" of early humanity, its 
			creation and earliest period, they are not history in any verifiable 
			sense.  
			  
			All the examples selected have an 
			undeniably legendary and mythological cast. Second, the sources are 
			relatively late with respect to the events they purport to describe.
			Berosus, who lived in the 4th century B.C., is describing a 
			time long anterior to his own. Indeed, Berosus' own information 
			about Oannes has survived most fully only in Eusebius' 
			Chronicle, written in the 4th century A.D.  
			  
			The Old Testament, in its current form, 
			dates from about 400 B.C., even though individual books may have 
			existed hundreds of years earlier in oral or written form. The 
			lateness of the source relative to the event it describes always 
			increases the possibility of extraneous accretions.
 Following exhortations in the writings of Aubeck, Bullard, and 
			Vallee, we will also investigate some folkloric material from 
			Armenia, Iran, and India - but in a second essay. In the case of 
			mythology and folklore, we are faced with a methodological problem 
			which Sagan and others raised and which needs to be restated - even 
			if we are unable to resolve it. This deals with additional criteria 
			for the selection or rejection of such material.
 
			  
			For example, it is the nature of a god 
			to have extra-human powers. Thus, Zeus hurling a lightning bolt, or 
			a giant flattening a house, need not be extraterrestrial figures 
			using weapons of mass destruction.  
			  
			To paraphrase Sigmund Freud, 
			sometimes a giant is just a giant.  
			  
			The peculiar nature of the subject and 
			its sources requires a methodology which examines myths, legends, 
			and folklore on an individual basis. The all-or-nothing approach - 
			either complete incorporation of "the gods" as extraterrestrials, or 
			their complete exclusion - will not do.
 With these considerations in mind, let us proceed to an 
			investigation of the primary sources.
 
 
			  
			  
			  
			The Oannes 
			Creatures/Entities 
			The Oannes creatures were talking amphibians which are described as 
			instructing humankind in all the essential arts of civilization over 
			a period of time.
 
			  
			The fullest account appears in the 
			Chronicle of the Christian cleric Eusebius (ca. 263-ca. 339), which 
			has recently become available in English translation. (9)
			 
			  
			In his sections How the Chaldeans 
			chronicled [their past], from Alexander Polyhistor; about their 
			writings and their first kingdom, and Abydenus on the first Chaldean 
			kings, Eusebius describes material found in Books One and Two of the 
			4th century B.C. writer Berosus.  
			  
			Eusebius' account itself derives from 
			summaries of Berosus made by early authors such as Alexander 
			Polyhistor (first half of the 1st century B.C.) and Abydenus 
			(perhaps 200 B.C.), and not from Berosus' text itself, which may or 
			may not have been extant when Eusebius was writing.  
			  
			In the passage below, Eusebius describes 
			the appearance of the Oannes entities and their activities.  
			  
				
				The Chaldean Chronicle
 
				How the Chaldeans chronicled [their past], from Alexander 
				Polyhistor; about their writings and their first kingdom.
 
 Here is what Berosus related in Book One, and in Book Two what 
				he wrote about the kings, one by one. He mentions the period 
				when Nabonassarus was king, but merely records the kings' names 
				not saying anything precise about their deeds, perhaps because 
				he did not consider that they had done anything worth recalling 
				- beyond [providing] a list of their names.
   
				This is how he begins. Apollodorus 
				says that Alorus was the first Chaldean king to rule in Babylon, 
				reigning for 10 sars. A sar consists of 3,600 years, and this 
				[figure may be] broken down into [units called] ners and soses. 
				He says that one ner is 600 years, while one sos is 60 years. 
				This is how the [Chaldean] ancients reckoned [periods of] years. 
				Having stated this, he proceeds to enumerate the kings of the 
				Assyrians, one by one.    
				There were 10 kings from the first 
				king, Alorus, to Xisuthrus. He says that during [the latter's] 
				time the first great flood occurred, which Moses also mentions. 
				He states that the reign of those kings consisted of a total of 
				120 sars, making a total [in our denomination] of 2043 myriad 
				years. He describes them one by one thusly.
 He says that on the death of Alorus, his son, Alaparus, [ruled 
				for] 3 sars; after Alaparus, the Chaldean Almelon, from the city 
				of Pautibiblon [? Bad-tibira], ruled for 13 sars; after Almelon, 
				Ammenon, from the city of Pautibiblon, ruled for 12 sars. Now in 
				his day a creature called Idotion, having the [composite] shape 
				of a man and a fish, emerged from the Red Sea [Persian Gulf].
   
				After [Ammenon], Amegalarus, from 
				the city of Pautibiblon, ruled for 18 sars, and after him, the 
				shepherd Daonus, from the city of Pautibiblon, ruled for 10 sars. 
				In his day, once again there emerged from the Red Sea four 
				hybrid beings of the same man-fish type [as Idotion]. Then 
				Edovanchus, from the city of Pautibiblon, ruled for 18 sars.
				   
				During his reign once again another 
				sort of man-fish being emerged from the Red Sea, called Odacon. 
				He says that all of them were from Oannes, [and] he concisely 
				describes them, one by one...[king list]
 This makes a total of 10 kings [ruling for] a total of 120 sars. 
				And they say that 120 sars equal 2043 myriad years, assuming 
				that a sar consists of 3,600 years.
 
 Such are the figures related in Alexander Polyhistor's book. And 
				if a person regards this as accurate history, and accepts as 
				valid [reigns lasting] for such myriads of years, then [that 
				person] would have to believe other incredible material found in 
				the same book.
   
				Howbeit, I will relate what that 
				same Berosus relates in the aforementioned historical romance, 
				and will resume their previous [thread] which [Alexander] 
				Polyhistor has put in his own book. One after the other he 
				recounts these types of things.
 More apocryphal Chaldean history [taken] from the same book of 
				Alexander Polyhistor about the Chaldeans.
 
 In the first of [his] Babylonian books, Berosus claims that he 
				lived in the time of Philip's [son] Alexander, and that he wrote 
				based on numerous books which were kept carefully in Babylon 
				[describing a period of] 215 myriad years, [such as] 
				chronologies, historical accounts, the Creator's making of 
				Heaven and Earth and the Seas, and [information] about kings and 
				their deeds...
 
 Now it happened that in the first year, in the confines of 
				Babylonia, there emerged from the Red Sea an awesome creature 
				which was named Oannes. As Apollodorus relates in his book, 
				[this being] had the complete body of a fish. Yet by the fish's 
				head was another appropriate [human] head, and by the tail were 
				[a pair of] human feet, and it could speak human language.
   
				A picture/likeness of [Oannes] has 
				been preserved to this day. He further states that this creature 
				kept company with humans during the day, completely abstaining 
				from any kind of food, instructing people in letters and the 
				techniques of different arts [including] city and temple 
				[building], knowledge of laws, the nature of weights and 
				measures, how to collect seeds and fruits; indeed, he taught 
				humankind everything necessary for domestic life on earth. From 
				that time on no one [individual] has discovered more. 
				   
				Now when the sun went down, the 
				Oannes creature once again returned to the sea, remaining until 
				morning in the vast expanse of the waters.    
				Thus it lived the life of an 
				amphibian. Subsequently other similar creatures came forth, as 
				the book of the kings makes clear. Furthermore it is said that 
				Oannes wrote about deeds and virtues, giving humankind words and 
				wisdom. (10)
 Eusebius' other passage concerning the Oannes entities is his 
				summary of the account by the writer Abydenus:
 
   
				Abydenus on the first Chaldean 
				kings
 
				So much for an account of Chaldean wisdom.
   
				Now it is said that Alorus was the 
				first to rule over the land of the Chaldeans as king. He claimed 
				that the most provident Lord had designated him as shepherd of 
				[his] people, and he ruled for 10 sars. A sar is 3,600 years, a 
				ner is 600 years, and a sos is 60 years. Alaparus ruled after 
				him, followed by Almelon from the city of Pautibiblon. 
				   
				During his reign the second 
				Anidostus emerged from the sea. [He was a being] like Oannes, 
				who had the appearance of a semi-divine hero. [Almelon] was 
				followed by Ammenon, then by Amegazarus. Next the shepherd was 
				Daonus. During his reign, four amphibious beings came on land, 
				emerging from the sea: Iovdocos, E'newgamos, E'newboghos, and 
				Amenentos.    
				Anodap'os [, another sea-creature, 
				appeared] during the reign of Edorescho who ruled after [Daonus]. 
				Other [kings] ruled after him, until Xisuthrus. These are also 
				recalled by Polyhistor.  (11) 
			
 ***
 
 
			It is not possible to categorize this story according to J. Allen 
			Hynek's three grades: Close Encounters of the First, Second, or 
			Third kinds.
 
			  
			To begin, there is no arrival by UFO. 
			Oannes and his kind are not described as coming out of a spaceship, 
			nor do they depart. On the contrary, these beings are described as 
			resident on earth - at least in Eusebius' summary - and engaged in 
			tutoring humankind for several generations. They are shown as 
			raising humanity up and also telling it about its origins (see next 
			section).  
			  
			They also provide information in written 
			form, which the humans bury to preserve from the Deluge. This 
			material is later retrieved and, presumably, helps humanity to 
			reestablish itself.
 Carl Sagan described the Oannes 
			story as,
 
				
				"...a legend which more nearly 
				fulfils some of our criteria for a genuine contact myth... Taken 
				at face value, the legend suggests that contact occurred between 
				human beings and a non-human civilization of immense powers on 
				the shores of the Persian Gulf, perhaps near the site of the 
				ancient Sumerian city of Eridu, and in the fourth millennium 
				B.C. or earlier. (12) ...   
				Sumerian civilization is depicted by 
				the descendants of the Sumerians themselves
				
				to be of non-human origin.
				   
				A succession of strange creatures 
				appears over the course of several generations. Their only 
				apparent purpose is to instruct mankind. Each knows of the 
				mission and accomplishments of his predecessors".  (13) 
			Oannes is described as a creature/animal 
			(Armenian gazan) but - like a robot -  does not eat, at 
			least when on land. 
			  
			It is tantalizing to speculate that if 
			this story reflects reality, entities of the Oannes type may have 
			been teaching land mammals during the day and sea mammals during the 
			night. (14)
 Beings in some way similar to Oannes are known from neighboring 
			areas. The Phoenicians of the western Levant worshipped a god, 
			Dagon, which was half-man and half-fish.  (15)
 
			  
			The first ruler of the city of Athens, 
			Cecrops, was described as half-man and half-fish. (16)
			 
			  
			Of course, these stories from lands not 
			so distant from Mesopotamia may derive from the Mesopotamian account 
			of Oannes. Farther east in Iran, India, and China, we encounter 
			similar myths of founding culture-figures who likewise are described 
			as part-human and part-fish.  (17) 
			  
			If these unusual stories reflect 
			reality, then the implication is that at some point early in human 
			history, creatures/entities of the Oannes type were active in 
			different parts of the Aegean, Mesopotamia, West and East Asia, and 
			played a crucial role in the development of human civilization.
 
			  
			  
			Mesopotamian 
			and Biblical Narratives
 
			...about Human Origins, Exterminations, and the 
			Intermarriage of Humans with Their Creators
 Accounts of the creation and early days of humanity appear in two 
			related traditions, Mesopotamian (Sumerian/Babylonian/Assyrian) and 
			Biblical.
 
			  
			Though some of the stories in Genesis 
			may derive from the earlier Mesopotamian legends, for convenience we 
			will discuss them separately. The Babylonian account of creation is 
			given by one of the Oannes entities in a lecture to its human 
			students.  
			  
			The passage below is from Eusebius'
			Chronicle: 
				
				There was a time, he says, when all 
				was dark and water. And there were other sorts of creatures [on 
				the earth].    
				Half of them could reproduce 
				themselves [asexually], while there were others which procreated 
				and bore humans with two wings, others with four wings and two 
				faces, with one body and two heads, male and female, and 
				[others] having both male and female natures [combined]. 
				   
				Other humans had the legs of goats, 
				horns on their heads, others had horses' hooves. Others had the 
				rear half of a horse and the front half of a human. Some had the 
				hybrid appearance of a horse and a bull. Also born were bulls 
				with human heads, dogs with quadripartite bodies having the 
				flippers of a fish and a fish's tail sprouting from the 
				hindquarters.    
				[There were] horses with dogs' heads 
				as well as humans and other creatures with horses' heads and/or 
				human forms and the extremities of fish. In addition there were 
				diverse sorts of dragon-shaped creatures, hybrid fish, reptiles, 
				snakes, and many types of astonishing creatures of differing 
				appearance. The pictures of each of them are preserved at the 
				temple of Belus.    
				All of them were ruled over by a 
				woman named Markaye' who was called T'aghatt'ay in Chaldean. The 
				Greek translation of T'aladday is "sea". Now while all of these 
				mixed [creatures] were arising, Belus attacked. He cut the woman 
				[i.e., the sea] in two, making half the sky and the other half 
				the earth, and he killed the creatures in it.    
				Thus [information] about the natural 
				world is expressed in the form of an allegorical fable which 
				means that initially there existed only water and moisture and 
				the creatures in it. Then that deity cut off its head and 
				another deity took the blood which dripped from it, mixed it 
				with soil, and created humankind.    
				Thus they became wise and partook of 
				the thoughts of the gods.
 As regards Belus, which translates into Greek as Dios and 
				into Armenian as Aramazd, he split the darkness in two, 
				separating heaven and earth from each other, and then smoothed 
				and fashioned the world. [Those] creatures which could not 
				endure the strength of the light perished.
   
				Then Belus looked at the world, 
				[both] the desert [parts] and the fruitful [parts], and gave an 
				order to one of the gods to take [some of] the blood which was 
				dripping down from his own severed head and to mix it with soil 
				and to create humans, other animals, and beasts which could 
				withstand this air.    
				Belus also established the sun, the 
				moon, and the five wandering stars. According to [Alexander] 
				Polyhistor, this is what Berosus relates in his first volume. In 
				the second volume he provides [information] about the reigns of 
				the ten kings individually, which we have already treated.
				   
				[This portion, from Oannes to Belus,] 
				extends [the account back] more than 40 myriads.  (18) 
			***
 
 
			According to the account above, prior to the creation of humans in 
			their present form, and apparently before the creation of dry land, 
			other beings existed.
 
			  
			These were hybrid or composite entities 
			having parts similar to a variety of mammals (including humans), 
			birds, reptiles, and fish. This group was destroyed by a deity named 
			Belus, who then created the Earth. Next, humanity was created from 
			an admixture of soil and divine blood.  
			  
			A second destruction of life - 
			"creatures which could not endure the strength of the light" - seems 
			to be indicated after Earth's creation, followed by another creation 
			of humans and animals "which could withstand this air." Thus, 
			according to Oannes' account, humans were a deliberate creation of 
			at least one god.  
			  
			The first creation was destroyed as the 
			god(s) fashioned animals better suited to the Earth, which also was 
			their creation.
 Sumerian mythology, which in many ways parented Babylonian 
			mythology, describes a subsequent attempt to destroy humanity (the 
			Flood), a theme shared with the Biblical account in Genesis, which 
			probably depends on it.  (19)
 
			  
			According to
			
			the Sumerian epic Gilgamesh, one 
			god was displeased with humanity for "making too much noise" 
			(20) and resolved to exterminate the entire species. One 
			dissident deity, Ea/Enki, informed the "Sumerian Noah" about the 
			impending disaster, and it is through his efforts that a group of 
			people of various professions board an ark taking along "the seed of 
			all life" and survive. (21)
 Intermarriage between gods and humans is suggested in a later 
			episode taking place generations later. In that period the epic's 
			hero, Gilgamesh, is described as partly divine, which probably 
			accounts for his great size and strength. (22)
 
			  
			Two non-human entities who guard a 
			strategic resource are able to recognize this semi-divine quality in 
			the hero, and it is this quality which gives him access. 
			(23)
 The 
			Sumero-Babylonian myths summarized 
			above describe humanity as a creation of gods. The creators became 
			disenchanted with their creation and would have destroyed it but for 
			the interference of a dissident god.
 
			  
			These tales also suggest interbreeding 
			of some of the gods with human beings. It is interesting that the 
			purpose given in these myths for the creation of humankind, 
			apparently, is to have servants "to do our work", (24) 
			though the nature of that work is not stated. (25) 
			  
			***
 
 
			The Biblical narrative, contained in Genesis 1-4, describes humanity 
			as the creation of one or more gods.
 
			  
			
			
			Yahweh, who later became the sole god of 
			Judaism, was not alone at the creation of humankind or 
			subsequently, since in Gen. 1.26 he is speaking to one or more 
			entities when he says:  
				
				"Let 
				us make man in our image, after our likeness..."
				 
			He addresses this same group just prior 
			to expelling Adam and Eve from the Garden:  
				
				"Behold, the man has become like one 
				of us, knowing good and evil". 
				(Gen. 4.22) 
			The presence of Yahweh's divine 
			colleagues who surround him in a heavenly court is suggested in 
			several other passages (Gen. 11.7; 1 Kg. 22.19; Job 1.6; Is. 6.8; 
			Ps. 29.1).  
			  
			Although subsequently declassed as 
			angels, members of this group (the "Heavenly Host") initially seem 
			to have been Yahweh's equals.
 The Biblical accounts of the creation of Adam and Eve and their 
			subsequent nurturing have elements of an experiment.
 
				
				"...then the Lord God formed man of 
				dust from the ground and breathed into his nostrils the breath 
				of life; and man became a living being". 
				(Gen. 2.7) 
			Adam, who is alone, is placed in a 
			comfortable environment, Eden, which is stocked with vegetation, 
			where his purpose - to the extent that humans have a purpose - is 
			"to till it and keep it" (Gen. 2.15).  
			  
			There follows creation of "every beast 
			of the field and every bird of the air" (Gen. 2.19) as company for 
			Adam. Apparently, it was the expectation of the Yahweh-type entities 
			that Adam would find in one of these animals "a helper fit for him" 
			(Gen. 2.18).  
			  
			The animals are brought to Adam for 
			naming,  
				
				"but for the man there was not found 
				a helper fit for him". 
				(Gen. 2.20) 
			The procedure for the creation of Eve 
			differed from that used for the creation of Adam, the other animals, 
			or even vegetation, all of which were made "out of the ground" (Gen. 
			2.4-9; 2.19).  
			  
			For Eve,  
				
				"the Lord God caused a deep sleep to 
				fall upon the man, and while he slept took one of his ribs and 
				closed up its place with flesh; and the rib which the Lord God 
				had taken from the man he made into a woman..." 
				(Gen. 2.21-22) 
			The Biblical narrative contains an 
			interfering dissident entity: Satan (Lucifer), or the Serpent.
			 
			  
			Though subsequently described as a rebel 
			angel and even a creation, this entity's formidable powers suggest 
			that it, like the beings of the "Heavenly Host," was initially 
			Yahweh's equal.
 Yahweh had told Adam and Eve that they would die if they ate the 
			fruit from a certain tree.
 
 But the serpent said to the woman,
 
				
				"You will not die. For God knows 
				that when you eat of it your eyes will be opened, and you will 
				be like god, knowing good and evil". 
				(Gen. 3.4-5) 
			The reason for the expulsion of Adam and 
			Eve from Eden was unrelated to their disobedience to Yahweh, since 
			in Gen. 3.21 Yahweh himself is described as making clothing for his 
			creations, who are suddenly embarrassed by their nakedness.  
			  
			Rather, the expulsion took place as a 
			prophylactic measure. Yahweh was concerned that Adam and Eve might 
			eat another fruit that was forbidden to them, from the tree of life:
 Then the Lord God said,
 
				
				"Behold, the man has become like one 
				of us, knowing good and evil; and now, lest he put forth his 
				hand and take also of the tree of life, and eat, and live 
				forever" - therefore the Lord God sent him forth from the 
				garden of Eden to till the ground from which he was taken.
				 
			He drove out the man; and at the east of 
			the garden of Eden he placed the cherubim, and a flaming sword which 
			turned every way, to guard the way to the tree of life (Gen. 
			3.22-24). 
 Eventually, Yahweh rued the day he created humanity, and decided to 
			destroy it:
 
				
				And the Lord was sorry that he had 
				made man on the earth, and it grieved him to his heart. 
				   
				So the Lord said,  
					
					"I will blot out man whom I have 
					created from the face of the ground, man and beast and 
					creeping things and birds of the air, for I am sorry that I 
					have made them". 
				Gen. 6.5-7 
			Noah, like his Sumerian counterpart, 
			boards an ark with various animals, survives the Flood, and 
			repeoples the earth. The Biblical narrative mentions a species which 
			was part god and part human.  
			  
			This was the group
			
			known as Nephilim. 
				
				When men began to multiply on the 
				face of the ground, and daughters were born to them, the sons of 
				God saw that the daughters of men were fair; and they took to 
				wife such of them as they chose...   
				The Nephilim were on the earth in 
				those days, and also afterward, when the sons of God came in to 
				the daughters of men, and they bore children to them. These were 
				the mighty men that were of old, the men of renown. 
				(Gen. 6.1-4)
				(26)
 
			***
 
 
			There are important similarities in the Mesopotamian and Biblical 
			accounts of the creation of humanity.
 
			  
			According to these two related 
			traditions, humankind was created by non-human entities possessing 
			great powers. The initial creation was inadequate for some reasons, 
			and so additional attempts were made. The "final product" after a 
			period in a controlled environment, was released into the world, to 
			shift for itself.  
			  
			Both traditions suggest that humans 
			looked like their creators. The creator entities, after a period of 
			time, became displeased with their "experiment" and attempted to 
			destroy humanity with a Flood, and by other means.  
			  
			This was barely prevented by a dissident 
			god, faction, or entities with powers comparable to those of the 
			creator entities, or by the selective benevolence of one god, 
			because of the goodness of one man.
 
 
			  
			  
			The Airship in the 
			Book of Ezekiel 
			In preceding sections of this essay the primary sources describe the 
			possible creation of humanity, and its civilization (or 
			domestication) by non-human intelligent entities. In this section a 
			primary source describes the possible presence of non-human 
			intelligent entities.
 
 Passages from the Book of Ezekiel are often cited as evidence of 
			flying saucers and extraterrestrial presence in antiquity. The topic 
			has been explored in some depth by others, in print and on the 
			Internet. Here we shall present the relevant passages for 
			documentation purposes, with little comment.
 
 As mentioned earlier, the extant text of the Book of Ezekiel dates 
			from around 400 B.C. Thus it is describing an event occurring more 
			than one hundred and fifty years earlier.
 
			  
			Ezekiel was an historical figure, a 
			spiritual leader who ministered to the Jews of parts of Mesopotamia 
			during the Babylonian Captivity. This ministry, which extended from 
			about 593 to 563 B.C., is also the thirty-year period during which 
			the incident described below occurred. It seems likely that Ezekiel 
			himself authored much of the book, despite later editing.
 The material from Ezekiel has been interpreted to describe:
 
				
					
					
					
					
					an airship
					
					its crew (organic, robotic, 
					and/or mixed)
					
					Ezekiel's contact with them
					
					his abduction by them and 
					transportation to another locality in Mesopotamia, an 
					experience which left him stunned for seven days 
			
 
			The Airship (1.4) 
				
				As I looked, behold, a stormy wind 
				came out of the north, and a great cloud, with brightness round 
				about it, and fire flashing forth continually, and in the midst 
				of the fire, as it were gleaming bronze.  
			
 The Crew (1.5-14)
 
				
				And from the midst of it came the 
				likeness of four living creatures. And this was their 
				appearance: they had the form of men, but each had four faces, 
				and each of them had four wings.    
				Their legs were straight, and the 
				soles of their feet were like the sole of a calf's foot; and 
				they sparkled like burnished bronze. Under their wings on their 
				four sides they had human hands. And the four had their faces 
				and their wings thus: their wings touched one another; they went 
				every one straight forward, without turning as they went. As for 
				the likeness of their faces, each had the face of a man in 
				front; the four had the face of a lion on the right side, the 
				four had the face of an ox on the left side, and the four had 
				the face of an eagle at the back.    
				Such were their faces. And their 
				wings were spread out above; each creature had two wings, each 
				of which touched the wing of another, while two covered their 
				bodies. And each went straight forward; wherever the spirit 
				would go, they went, without turning as they went.    
				In the midst of the living creatures 
				there was something that looked like burning coals of fire, like 
				torches moving to and fro among the living creatures; and the 
				fire was bright, and out of the fire went forth lightning.
				   
				And the living creatures darted to 
				and fro, like a flash of lightning.  
			  
			  
			Crew and Ship(s) (1.15-24) 
				
				Now as I looked at the living 
				creatures, I saw a wheel upon the earth beside the living 
				creatures, one for each of the four of them.    
				As for the appearance of the wheels 
				and their construction: their appearance was like the gleaming 
				of a chrysolite; and the four had the same likeness, their 
				construction being as it were a wheel within a wheel. 
				   
				When they went, they went in any of 
				their four directions without turning as they went.    
				The four wheels had rims and they 
				had spokes; and their rims were full of eyes round about. And 
				when the living creatures went, the wheels went beside them; and 
				when the living creatures rose from the earth, the wheels rose. 
				Wherever the spirit would go, they went, and the wheels rose 
				along with them; for the spirit of the living creatures was in 
				the wheels.    
				When those went, these went; and 
				when those stood, these stood; and when those rose from the 
				earth, the wheels rose along with them; for the spirit of the 
				living creatures was in the wheels.
 Over the heads of the living creatures there was the likeness of 
				a firmament, shining like a crystal, spread out above their 
				heads. And under the firmament their wings were stretched out 
				straight, one toward another; and each creature had two wings 
				covering its body.
   
				And when they went, I heard the 
				sound of their wings like the sound of many waters, like the 
				thunder of the Almighty, a sound of tumult like the sound of a 
				host; when they stood still, they let down their wings. 
				 
			
 
			Controller Entity (1.25-28) 
				
				And there came a voice from above 
				the firmament over their heads; when they stood still, they let 
				down their wings.
 And above the firmament over their heads there was the likeness 
				of a throne, in appearance like sapphire; and seated above the 
				likeness of a throne was a likeness as it were of a human form.
   
				And upward from what had the 
				appearance of his loins I saw as it were gleaming bronze, like 
				the appearance of fire enclosed round about; and downward from 
				what had the appearance of his loins I saw as it were the 
				appearance of fire, and there was brightness round about him.
 Like the appearance of the bow that is in the cloud on the day 
				of rain, so was the appearance of the brightness round about.
 
 Such was the appearance of the likeness of the glory of the 
				Lord. And when I saw it, I fell upon my face, and I heard the 
				voice of one speaking.
 
			  
			Abduction and Disorientation (3.12-15)
 
				
				Then the Spirit lifted me up, and as 
				the glory of the Lord arose from its place, I heard behind me 
				the sound of a great earthquake; it was the sound of the wings 
				of the living creatures as they touched one another, and the 
				sound of the wheels beside them, that sounded like a great 
				earthquake.    
				The Spirit lifted me up and took me 
				away, and I went in bitterness in the heat of my spirit, the 
				hand of the Lord being strong upon me; and I came to the exiles 
				at Telabib, who dwelt by the river Chebar.    
				And I sat there overwhelmed among 
				them seven days.  
			
 
 
			Conclusions 
			Whether the sources examined in this essay are considered 
			"historical" or mythological, the story they tell is the same:
 
				
				humanity was created by intelligent 
				non-human entities.  
			The Mesopotamian account of creation was 
			told to a human audience by a talking amphibian, one of the Oannes 
			creatures described in Eusebius' summary of earlier historians.
			 
			  
			According to this account, humankind was 
			the product of deliberate creation. Earlier experiments had failed, 
			and their products - hybrid and composite beings - died and/or were 
			destroyed.  
			  
			The gods were dissatisfied with the 
			resulting humans as well and tried to destroy them, though a 
			dissident deity managed to prevent total annihilation.  
			  
			Cases of non-humans intermarrying with 
			humans appear in the Mesopotamian myths. Created by gods to "do our 
			work," and then almost exterminated for "making too much noise," 
			humanity was not well regarded by its makers.  
			  
			However, this account itself was 
			narrated by a very caring being, one of a series of amphibians which 
			at some point emerged from the sea and instructed humans over many 
			generations.
 The Biblical account of creation in Genesis also shows humanity as a 
			result of extraterrestrial experiment. These extraterrestrials were 
			not especially impressed with their creations, and they did not want 
			them to learn too much, become too aware, or live too long. A 
			dissident god tried to interfere, in this case to educate the 
			humans. Yahweh eventually destroyed his creation, sparing only one 
			family.
 
			  
			The Bible, like the Mesopotamian 
			sources, also describes cases of non-human intermarriage with 
			humans.
 Earlier we quoted a conclusion made by Dr. Thomas Bullard, 
			that,
 
				
				"pre-1800 anomalies do not make the 
				case for long-term alien visitation, nor do they necessarily 
				refute it".  (27) 
			In the case of the earliest period which 
			is the subject of the present essay, the situation is somewhat 
			different.  
			  
			Here, all the relevant earliest written 
			sources ascribe the creation and development of humanity to 
			intelligent non-humans with immense powers. These entities are 
			described as preexistent and the creators of the planet itself with 
			all its life forms.  
			  
			At some time after the creation, other 
			intelligent non-humans - amphibians - are described as educating 
			humanity. The various creators and/or educators do not arrive in 
			spaceships and do not depart, either.  
			  
			The implication is that they were 
			present before the creation of Earth, and were still present when 
			the sources were composed.
 
 
 
			  
			Footnotes
			
				
				1. I. 
				S. Shklovski and Carl Sagan, Intelligent Life in the Universe 
				(Boca Raton, Florida, 1998), pp. 453-454. An important 
				predecessor to the authors mentioned in this essay was Charles 
				Fort (1874-1932). Fort's Complete Works are available 
				online at sacred-texts.com, and are well worth investigating:
				
				Complete Works of Charles Fort. 
				Fort's works are available as pdf downloads here:
				
				Book of the Damned (1919);
				
				New Lands (1923);
				
				Lo! (1931);
				
				Wild Talents (1933). 
				  
				2. Two extracts dealing with remote 
				and classical antiquity from Vallee's and Aubeck's important 
				book Wonders in the Sky: Unexplained Aerial Objects from 
				Antiquity to Modern Times (New York, 2010) may be downloaded 
				here. This material is not in the public domain and is presented 
				solely for non-commercial educational/research purposes. Both 
				extracts deal with the earliest periods only. The first is a 
				selection of what we consider the most convincing
				
				myths Vallee and Aubeck 
				collected which suggest extraterrestrial contact. The second 
				extract is a selection of the most convincing
				
				historical events from their 
				extensive Chronicle section.    
				3. Thomas E. Bullard, "Anomalous 
				Aerial Phenomena before 1800" in Jerome Clark's UFO 
				Encyclopedia (1992), p. 55-62. The full article may be 
				downloaded here:
				
				Anomalous Aerial Phenomena before 1800.
				   
				4. Ibid., pp. 52-53. For 
				another excellent study of early aerial phenomena and possible 
				UFOs, see the writings of the late Richard Stothers, an 
				influential scientist at the Goddard Center at NASA. His article 
				"Unidentified Flying Objects in Classical Antiquity," from 
				The Classical Journal, vol. 103.1, 2007 pp. 79-92 with 
				important bibliography may be downloaded here:
				
				Unidentified Flying Objects in Classical 
				Antiquity.    
				Additional excellent bibliographies 
				are available at the website
				
				Archives for UFO Research in 
				Sweden. Their material on antiquity is here:
				
				Ancient Cultures, Archeology and Ancient 
				Myths. Additional reliable and thought-provoking 
				material is available at Dimitris Hatzopoulos' Best UFO 
				Resources website. See especially his
				
				Summary and
				
				Literature pages. There is an 
				interesting article at Wikipedia on
				
				Ancient Astronauts, which 
				includes much material we excluded from this essay.    
				5. Bullard, op. cit., p. 50.
				   
				6. Bullard, ibid., pp. 50-51.
				   
				7. Bullard, ibid., p. 67.
				   
				8. J. Allen Hynek, The Ufo 
				Experience: a Scientific Inquiry (London, 1972; reprinted 
				many times), Part II, chapters 8-10. Hynek's study may be 
				downloaded here:
				
				The Ufo Experience: a Scientific Inquiry. 
				File size: 14.3 MB.    
				9. Eusebius' Chronicle, 
				translated from Classical Armenian by Robert Bedrosian (2008) is 
				available on another page of this website and may be downloaded 
				there:
				
				Eusebius' 
				Chronicle.    
				10. Eusebius' Chronicle, 
				op. cit., pp. 3-4.    
				11. Ibid., p. 10.    
				12. I. S. Shklovski and Carl Sagan,
				op. cit., pp. 455-456.    
				13. Ibid., p. 459. Sagan's 
				remark that "Each knows of the mission and accomplishments of 
				his predecessors" is based on a fragment of the Greek original 
				of Eusebius, preserved in a much later work of George the 
				Syncellus (died after 813). That fragment adds "All these [Oannes 
				creatures], says Apollodorus, related particularly and 
				circumstantially whatever Oannes had informed them of: of these 
				Abydenus has made no mention," I. P. Cory, Fragments ... 
				(1832 edition), p. 31. An English translation of the fragments 
				is available online at sacred-texts.com
				
				Cory's 
				Fragments. The quotation referenced above is
				
				here. An expanded version (Cory's 
				Ancient Fragments of the Phoenician, Carthaginian, Babylonian, 
				Egyptian and other authors) appeared in London, 1876, by E. 
				Richmond Hodges. A pdf download of this edition is available
				
				here. The quotation is on page 52 of this edition. 
				   
				14. The detail that the Oannes 
				creatures did not eat while on land is interesting, and suggests 
				the possibility that they were intelligent machines, assuming 
				they did not eat in the water either. In other words, though the 
				source describes them as being part human and part fish, they 
				may have been neither.    
				15. Entry
				
				Dagon from the Jewish 
				Encyclopaedia (1906). The entry is available in pdf format
				
				here.    
				16. Entry "Cecrops" from William 
				Smith's Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology 
				(London, 1850; reprinted several times), volume 1, pp. 657-658. 
				A download of the article is available in pdf format
				
				here. Several of Smith's 
				encyclopedic Dictionaries are available on another page 
				of this website, along with other useful reference materials for 
				mythology, such as the Mythology of All Races series, and 
				the Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics. See our
				
				Folklore, Mythology, and Heterodox Beliefs 
				page.    
				17. For Persia/Iran, the guardians 
				are fish, not half-human half-fish. Ten kar fish who do 
				not eat and are spiritually fed, protect early creation. For a 
				discussion see S. N. Kanga's article in the Spiegel Memorial 
				Volume (Bombay, 1908), pp. 1-11. The article may be 
				downloaded here:
				
				The Homa Tree and the Ten Kar-fish of the 
				Bundahishn and the Trees of Knowledge and Life and the Serpent 
				of the Bible: A Comparison. For India,
				
				Brahma and
				
				Vishnu/Matsya (from Wikipedia); 
				for China:
				Fuxi 
				(from Wikipedia).    
				18. Eusebius' Chronicle, 
				op. cit., p. 5.    
				19. Stephanie Dalley, Myths from 
				Mesopotamia, Creation, the Flood, Gilgamesh, and others 
				(Oxford, 1989), paperback 1991 (the edition cited in this 
				essay), Introduction, pp. xv-xix and passim. This 
				is an excellent and accessible translation of some important 
				Middle Eastern myths with scholarly notes and bibliography by S. 
				Dalley, a renowned archaeologist and cuneiformist. Dalley 
				explains how aspects of Sumerian culture, including mythology, 
				were adopted by other later peoples such as the Hittites, 
				Babylonians, and Assyrians.    
				The
				
				myths about Creation and the 
				Flood are generally the same, with local place names, mountains, 
				rivers, etc. substituted in the different versions, though there 
				are important variations. All the myths in Dalley's book were 
				translated from the Akkadian language. For our purposes, the 
				variations in the different versions are not crucial, since all 
				the versions contain the same information about the specific 
				points we raise here. For Dalley's discussion of the differences 
				in the myths of Creation and the Flood in Mesopotamia, the 
				Bible, and the Greek world, see op. cit., pp. 4-8. 
				   
				20. Ibid., pp. 18-28, 286, 
				288, 298.    
				21. Ibid., pp. 22, 27, 29-30, 
				110-112.    
				22. Gilgamesh is described as 2/3 
				divine and 1/3 mortal, son of a mortal king, Lugulbanda, and a 
				divine mother, Ninsun, ibid. pp. 40-41, 51, 96, 99, 107. 
				His comrade, Enkidu, was created from a lump of clay, pp. 52-53. 
				Two other figures who were originally mortals, Utnapishtim/Atrahasis 
				and his wife, were granted immortality by the gods as a 
				reward, pp. 116.    
				23. Ibid., pp. 96-97. 
				   
				24. Ibid., pp. 4, 14, 228, 
				261.    
				25. The gods are mentioned as 
				inhabiting and travelling back and forth in four zones: Heaven, 
				Earth, the Underworld, and a watery deep called the Apsu. Ea, 
				the chief deity and the wisest, resides in the Apsu (ibid., 
				pp. 210, 223). Oannes-type entities appear as the Seven Sages or 
				Seven Craftsmen who were believed to have been responsible for 
				massive or cyclopean building (ibid., pp. 50, 120, 182). 
				At some point the chief deity became displeased with these 
				teachers and banished them to the Apzu (ibid., p. 291).
				   
				The Seven Sages are sometimes 
				referred to as "holy carp" (ibid., p. 292). Dr. Dalley in 
				the Glossary entry for the Seven Sages writes: 
				 
					
					"According to cuneiform 
					traditions, known only from indirect references and from 
					Berossus, Ea sent seven divine sages, apkallu, in the 
					form of puradu fish (carp?) from the Apsu to teach 
					the arts (Sumerian me) of civilization to mankind 
					before the Flood. They were: Adapa (U-an, called Oannes by 
					Berossus), U-an-duga, En-me-duga, En-me-galama, En-me-buluga, 
					An-Enlilda, and Utu-abzu. Each is also known by other names 
					or epithets, and is paired with an antediluvian king, hence 
					their collective name 'counsellors', muntalku. In 
					this capacity they were credited with building walled 
					cities.    
					Responsible for technical 
					skills, they were also known as 'craftsmen', ummianu, 
					a word which puns with Adapa's name U-an. They were banished 
					back to the Apsu forever after angering Ea. After the flood, 
					certain great men of letters and exorcists were accorded 
					sage-status, although only as mortals. Deities other than Ea 
					- Ishtar, Nabu, and Marduk - claimed to control the sages. 
					In iconography sages are shown either as fish-men, or with 
					bird attributes appropriate to Underworld creatures." 
					ibid., pp. 327-328.  
				In the Mesopotamian myths, the gods 
				seem to comport themselves with the decisions of their assembly. 
				See, for example, the outrage of the gods at Ellil for 
				unilaterally ordering the Flood without consultation (ibid., 
				p. 115).    
				The weapons of the gods consist of 
				natural disasters such as floods, drought and disease (ibid., 
				pp. 18-20). But the gods also possess rays and radiances which 
				serve as weapons and, if lost, can hobble the god who loses 
				them. The "Tablets of Destiny" may also serve as a shield of 
				sorts, since when held against the chest, they will deflect 
				weapons hurled at whoever holds them (ibid., pp. 215, 
				225, 237, 251, 293). Another weapon is the ability to change 
				people's minds (ibid., 298-299).    
				A number of intelligent composite 
				creatures appear in the Mesopotamian myths. These include 
				Scorpion-men (ibid., pp. 96, 212, 224), fish-men, 
				bull-men (ibid., 237) shape-shifting gallu-demons 
				(212, 224), and others (see the drawings on p. 316). The god 
				Marduk, though not composite, is described as having four eyes, 
				four ears, and five fearsome rays (ibid., p. 236). 
				   
				26. The
				
				half-divine half-human Nephilim 
				are mentioned as being present after the Flood as well (Numbers 
				13.33). Yahweh also attempts to hobble humanity again after 
				the Flood. In Genesis 11.1-9, humans were building a city "and a 
				tower with its top in the heavens."    
				"And the Lord came down to see the 
				city and the tower, which the sons of men had built. And the 
				Lord said, 'Behold, they are one people, and they have all one 
				language; and this is only the beginning of what they will do; 
				and nothing that they propose to do will now be impossible for 
				them. Come, let us go down, and there confuse their language, 
				that they may not understand one another's speech.'" The Bible 
				we use is The Oxford Annotated Bible, revised standard 
				version (New York, 1962).    
				27. Bullard, op. cit., p. 67.
				 
			  
			  |