Alice C. Linsley
According to the linguistic historian Christopher Ehret, traditional Afro-Asiatic religion was originally henotheistic. Henotheism is belief in a supreme creator God or High God (Tengri, Tien, El, Yahweh) with lesser assisting created powers with some divine power. According to Talmudic texts these powers of angelic beings have a hierarchical ranking, like a pyramid.
In ancient Egypt these powers were represented by animals and insect totems and/or plants. Only one power was represented as a man - Horus (Enki in Akkadian). He was called the "son of God" and he was served by a caste of royal priests called "Horite" Habiru/Hebrew.
Ehret refers to the ritual priests among the Kushites as the '*wap'er'. They were accorded significant political authority alongside the ruler. The *wap'er presided over the rituals directed toward the High God and acted as the intercessor and prophet of the God. These are the ruler-priests, called har-wa and sarki in ancient Egypt.
A seventh century Assyrian text says that Sargon's birthplace was a city on the banks of the Euphrates called Azu-piranu. It was a Horite shrine as evidenced by the word piranu. The Hapiru devotees of Horus called a temple O-piru, meaning "House of the Sun." Azu is the East African name for God - Asa. So Azu-piranu means “House of God” and is equivalent to the Hebrew word Beth-el. Horite ruler-priests were called Hapiru in Akkadian and Habiru in the Kushitic languages. The Egyptians called these temple attendants ˁpr.w, the w being the plural suffix. This has been rendered '*wap'er' by Christopher Ehret.
A seventh century Assyrian text says that Sargon's birthplace was a city on the banks of the Euphrates called Azu-piranu. It was a Horite shrine as evidenced by the word piranu. The Hapiru devotees of Horus called a temple O-piru, meaning "House of the Sun." Azu is the East African name for God - Asa. So Azu-piranu means “House of God” and is equivalent to the Hebrew word Beth-el. Horite ruler-priests were called Hapiru in Akkadian and Habiru in the Kushitic languages. The Egyptians called these temple attendants ˁpr.w, the w being the plural suffix. This has been rendered '*wap'er' by Christopher Ehret.
The most famous name for a parliament in Africa is the word 'Pharaoh'. The word actually translates 'great house', a common African expression for a senate or national parliament. Variants of the phrase might be Lesser House - to indicate a provincial parliament. The term pharaoh does not refer merely to a physical building, or a dynastic line, although it may have had dual meaning in later centuries. The actual term for king in ancient Egyptian is nesu biti."
It is to Ko for "king" and sa for "great" that we must turn now. In the following list of cognates, we note how the K and Sa frequently appear in the Afro-Asiatic languages.
malku - king (Ugaritic)
melek - king (Hebrew)
bo kor - king (Kushitic) Ko or qo was an honorific suffix for rulers, as in the rulers Sheba-ko and Tahar-ko.
kan or khan - male leader, derived from the word Kain, the first ruler in the Bible.
kandake - female leader, spelled Candace in English Bibles.
ko/ka - king (Kushite/Egyptian)
ko-Re (qore) - Re's appointed ruler/son
sar - king (Sumerian/Accadian) Sargon is related to the Chadic word for king - gon lere.
sara - son of Ra or Ra is great (Egyptian)
sarru - king (Babylonian/Assyrian)
sarki - ruler-priest (Chadic and Sudra/Sudanese of India and Nepal)
Dr. Kashagam mentions the term Nesu biti, another reference to king. However, it refers specifically to the ruler of a united kingdom comprising the Upper Nile and the Lower Nile. Nesu biti contains the signs for papyrus sedge and bee. Sedge was the symbol of the Upper Nile and the bee was the symbol of the Lower Nile. The titles Nesu biti and Sa Ra ("Son of Ra" or "Ra is great") appear together in cartouches that have been found in the tombs of Egyptian and Kushite rulers. These rulers were believed to be the "sons of God" on earth (Gen. 6:1,2). The Ko was the deified ruler who ruled over two lands, which is why he wore a double crown. The Kushite rulers united the peoples of the Upper and Lower Nile to one another and united the peoples to the deity Ra (Ani in Akkadian).
Christians will note that the celestial archetype applies to Jesus Christ, and is manifested in a pronounced way at his baptism at an ancient Kushite river shrine called Nim-Ra on the Jordan. Nim-Ra means the "waters of Ra" and this location is between Mannaseh/Ephraim (west) and Mannaseh/Gad (east). There the river became the sacred center when Jesus was manifested as the Son of God.
Rivers among Abraham's Kushite ancestors represent numerous archetypes, including the serpent and the place of connection, and the sacred center. The ancient Egyptians and Kushites were great sky watchers. They observed that the Pole Star (Vega or Wa'gi in Arabic) and the Sun were sometimes visible at the same time on opposite sides of the Nile. This was an auspicious connection. The Nile would have been considered the place of meeting, a sacred center.
Likewise, the clan of Manasseh held land on opposite sides of the Jordan. On the west side Manasseh and Ephraim were considered of the "house of Joseph." On the east side, Manasseh (M-nasheh) and Gad (Gd)were a confederation of the "house of Jacob." Joseph represents the Kushitic/Egyptian heritage of the people. As the Biblical anthropologist Susan Burns points out, "Joseph is the patriarch of the ceph tribes. Ceph is suph (papyrus)." Jacob symbolizes the Semitic/Aramaic/Mesopotamian heritage of the people, symbolized the gd ha-nasheh, the sinew which was touched by the angel of the Lord.
There is a relationship between nasheh and nahushtan, the bronze serpent on Moses' rod. Reeds, sinews, veins, lightening and rivers are like serpents. It is easy to see how prehistoric man might have thought of lightening as God's serpent. Where it struck there was a connection between heaven and earth. That place would be considered the sacred center, just as the Nile was the sacred center between the Pole Star and the rising sun, and the Jordan was the sacred center between M-nasheh/Ephraim and M-nasheh/Gad.
In the older Proto-Saharan languages spoken by Abraham's Kushite ancestors N at the end of the word designates 2. In Dravidian appa is father, but appan means fathers. Har-appa in Dravidian means Horus is father.
At the beginning of the word N designates 1 and refers to the deity, as in the Egyptian ntr - god/deity, a compound of N and TR, meaning pure. The original root for vein, river, tongue, serpent, sinew and lightening was NS. The S originally would have been a pictograph representing a serpent or anything serpentine. It also indicates "great" and can mean "Man" (Egyptian - sa), and throne (Proto-Saharan es or is). NS suggests connection between heaven and earth, and between deity and man. The serpent was a sacred symbol to the Kushites, especially to the metalworking clans such as the Hittites who called themselves NS (Nes).
Manasseh was divided because Joseph's other son was of the House of Potiphar and probably stayed in Heliopolis, Egypt. This is consistent with the marriage and ascendancy pattern of firstborn sons among Abraham's Horite people. The firstborn of the ruler's half-sister wife ascended to the throne of his biological father. So Isaac ascended to the throne of Abraham. The firstborn son of the ruler's cousin/niece wife ascended to the throne of his maternal grandfather, after whom he was named. So Joktan, Abraham's firstborn son by Keturah, ascended to the throne of his maternal grandfather, after whom he was named. Joktan the Younger was the progenitor of the Joktanite Tribes of Arabia (shown above).
Related reading: Pepinakht-Heqaib: Upholding the Rights of Two Sons; The Peoples of Canaan; The Sacred Center in Biblical Theology; The Kushite Marriage Pattern Drove Kushite Expansion; Sister Wives and Cousin Wives; Recovering the African Background of Genesis
In the Agaw language, "gud" is the word used for intestines.
ReplyDeleteSusan
Yes! Agaw is a Kushitic language and Abraham's ancestors were ethnically Kushites.
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