Alice C. Linsley
Who was Abraham’s mother? Why is she nameless, given that Jewish identity is traced through the mother? Given Abraham’s prominence in Scripture, it seems odd that his mother should not be named, or her ancestry more precisely identified.
The Babylonian Talmud says that "Terah took a wife and her name was Amsalai, the daughter of Karnevo; and the wife of Terah conceived and bare him a son in those days." (Jasher 7:50) This connects her to the Horite Hebrew who maintained temples and shrines at high places (the kar). An example is Karnak on the Nile. Kar refers to a sheltered or fortified site with shrine priests. Karnak on the Nile and Carnak in Brittany are examples. In Dravidian car means "sheltered together" and kari refers to a river. In Manding kara means "to assemble." In ancient Sumerian Ekur (𒂍𒆳 É.KUR) refers to a mountain house, pyramid, or elevated temple. This same triple mountain symbol has been found on seals from the Indus Valley civilization.
Who was Abraham’s mother? Why is she nameless, given that Jewish identity is traced through the mother? Given Abraham’s prominence in Scripture, it seems odd that his mother should not be named, or her ancestry more precisely identified.
The Babylonian Talmud says that "Terah took a wife and her name was Amsalai, the daughter of Karnevo; and the wife of Terah conceived and bare him a son in those days." (Jasher 7:50) This connects her to the Horite Hebrew who maintained temples and shrines at high places (the kar). An example is Karnak on the Nile. Kar refers to a sheltered or fortified site with shrine priests. Karnak on the Nile and Carnak in Brittany are examples. In Dravidian car means "sheltered together" and kari refers to a river. In Manding kara means "to assemble." In ancient Sumerian Ekur (𒂍𒆳 É.KUR) refers to a mountain house, pyramid, or elevated temple. This same triple mountain symbol has been found on seals from the Indus Valley civilization.
Since the Kar were places of burnt offerings, the term is often associated with charcoal and soot. The Turkish kara means "black." In Magyar korom refers to soot, as does the Korean word kurim. Among the Nilotic Luo kar specifies a place with boundaries.
Abraham's mother may have been a daughter of a ruler of Kar Nebo or Har Nevo, that is, Mount Nebo. She probably was the daughter of a Horite priest. The evidence indicates that the Horites and the Sethites were Hebrew. Endogamy was a culture trait of these early Hebrew. The men married the daughters of Horite and Sethite Hebrew priests.
Analysis of the kinship pattern of Abraham’s people reveals that her father was Nahor the Elder. She married Terah and named their first-born son Nahor after her father. This means that Nahor was older than Abraham and explains why Nahor inherited Terah's territory.
Abraham’s mother and father were the children of Nahor by different wives. Both mothers were daughters of Terah the Elder who was likely a Horite. It may have been during his lifetime that the clans parted ways, some leaving Terah in Canaan (Ex. 33:28-29) for Mesopotamia.
Since both of Nahor’s wives were daughters of Terah the Elder, it is evident that Nahor married sisters who were his cousins. We find this pattern with Jacob and his wives Rachel and Leah. It appears that Terah sought his wives from among his mother’s people, just as Jacob did.
Where would Terah have gone to acquire his wives? He would have gone to his mother's people, to the clan of Terah in the land of Canaan. He would have gone to his Horite kin who lived between Mt. Hor near Petra and Mt. Hor near Sela. This is an important piece of information because it links Abraham’s father to the land of Canaan and identifies him as a Horite. Terah was named after his maternal grandfather Terah the Horite. This means that Abraham's mother was from Canaan.
The difficulty in tracing her line is due to the hidden third, Terah the Elder, Abraham's great grandfather. He represents the third of three earlier patriarchs: Nahor, Haran and Terah. From these three Afro-Asiatic chiefs come the later Patriarchs: Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. (See Three-Clan Confederations.)
The recurrence of 3 sons is a theme of Genesis. The 3 clan chiefs represent a unity so seeing the bigger picture of Abraham's people requires looking for all 3 sons, one of which is sometimes hidden. Gog Magog are mentioned in Gen. 10, but the third "Og" clan in this confederation is not mentioned until and Numbers 21:33.
Analysis of the kinship pattern of Abraham’s people reveals that her father was Nahor the Elder. She married Terah and named their first-born son Nahor after her father. This means that Nahor was older than Abraham and explains why Nahor inherited Terah's territory.
Abraham’s mother and father were the children of Nahor by different wives. Both mothers were daughters of Terah the Elder who was likely a Horite. It may have been during his lifetime that the clans parted ways, some leaving Terah in Canaan (Ex. 33:28-29) for Mesopotamia.
Since both of Nahor’s wives were daughters of Terah the Elder, it is evident that Nahor married sisters who were his cousins. We find this pattern with Jacob and his wives Rachel and Leah. It appears that Terah sought his wives from among his mother’s people, just as Jacob did.
Where would Terah have gone to acquire his wives? He would have gone to his mother's people, to the clan of Terah in the land of Canaan. He would have gone to his Horite kin who lived between Mt. Hor near Petra and Mt. Hor near Sela. This is an important piece of information because it links Abraham’s father to the land of Canaan and identifies him as a Horite. Terah was named after his maternal grandfather Terah the Horite. This means that Abraham's mother was from Canaan.
The difficulty in tracing her line is due to the hidden third, Terah the Elder, Abraham's great grandfather. He represents the third of three earlier patriarchs: Nahor, Haran and Terah. From these three Afro-Asiatic chiefs come the later Patriarchs: Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. (See Three-Clan Confederations.)
The recurrence of 3 sons is a theme of Genesis. The 3 clan chiefs represent a unity so seeing the bigger picture of Abraham's people requires looking for all 3 sons, one of which is sometimes hidden. Gog Magog are mentioned in Gen. 10, but the third "Og" clan in this confederation is not mentioned until and Numbers 21:33.
The “Hidden Son” is a Messianic message that runs throughout the Bible. Christians believe that the Hidden Son is the divine person of Jesus Christ, the perfect fulfillment of all Messianic expectations and promises.
We note the persistence of the theme of 3 sons in these listings:
We note the persistence of the theme of 3 sons in these listings:
Gen. 4 - Cain, Abel, Seth
Gen. 4 - Jubal, Jabal, Tubal
Gen. 7 - Ham, Shem, Japheth
Gen. 11 - Haran, Nahor, Abraham
Exploring the identity of Abraham’s mother reveals another triad:
Terah the Elder, Joktan the Elder, and Nahor the Elder. These were great Afro-Asiatic chiefs whose territories were probably contiguous.
Abraham’s mother was a daughter of Terah the Elder and likely the sister of Keturah’s mother. (Keturah was Abraham's cousin bride.) If so, we can say that Terah the Elder and Joktan the Elder (Keturah's father) married sisters. We have seen this pattern before. Cain and his brother Seth married sisters, the noble daughters of an Proto-Saharan chief named Enoch/Enosh/Enos.
The Horites appear to have been a confederation of numerous clans including the House of Sheba and the House of Joktan. They were a caste of ruler-priests as is evidenced by their names.
Horite Names and Roots
Ancient Egyptian priest |
Another of Abraham's nephews was Tahash. Exodus 25:5 speaks of "5 rams' skins dyed red, and tahash skins; acacia wood." This suggests that he was in the priestly caste. These were called sarki in the ancient Afro-Asiatic world. The sarki sacrificed animals and tanned the hides. God acts as the first sarki when He sacrifices animals to make coverings for the man and the woman (Gen. 3:21). Today Sarki live in the Orissa province of India , and as rulers in Orisha , Nigeria . They are also in the Tarai region of Nepal . Sometimes they are called Har-wa which is the ancient Egyptian word for Horite priest. Today the Buddhist priests of central Asia wear attire very similar to the priests of ancient Egypt .
One of Abraham's descendants was Buz, the grandfather of Yeshishai, the Aramaic form of Yeshua/Jesus (I Chronicles 5:14). This connects Jesus' name with the devotees of Horus. Buz is grouped with the peoples of Dedan and Tema in Jeremiah 25:23. This Horite confederation is identified as Dedan, Tema and Buz. Abraham and his mother spoke languages like ancient Dedanite, the language of the Arabian Kushites.
Dedanite and the other North Arabian dialects have much in common with Old Egyptian. This is evident in the Dedanite and Egyptian use of the root MR. In both languages the word for woman is mr’t. This is related to the Egyptian word mer, meaning love. The word for mother in Egyptian and Dedanite is ‘m .
According to the Babylonian Talmud her name was Amsalai (maybe pronounced Amaslai)
ReplyDelete"Surely Abraham’s mother must be as important as the mothers of Isaac and Jacob. Then why is she not named?"
ReplyDeleteEven if she was idolatrous, while her son was Our Father in Faith?
Bible is silent on subject, but Flavius Josephus agrees with Arabo-Islamic tradition insofar that he claims Abram was in his youth idolater, and became a monotheist contender.
Analysis of the kinship pattern of Abraham's people, using the genealogical information in Genesis, reveals that blood line was traced through the mother while social status (caste) was traced through the father. That is why only first-born sons are listed in the Genesis "begats". The ruler's first-born son ruled after him. The first-born son was usually the son of the ruler's first wife who was a half-sister (as was Sarah to Abraham). The other wife was either a patrilineal parallel cousin (as was Keturah to Abraham)or a patrilineal niece (as was Rebecca to Isaac). The cousin/niece bride named her first-born son after her father because that son assumed rule over the territory of his maternal grandfather. This is what Claude Levi-Strauss discovered: that in patrilineal systems the mother and the son do not belong to the same clan.
ReplyDeleteThere is no biblical evidence to support the view that Abraham was an idolater. I've responded to this before: http://jandyongenesis.blogspot.com/2009/12/was-abraham-pagan.html
ReplyDeleteAlice,
ReplyDeleteThank you for posting your research. Biblical Anthropology is fascinating. While reading I saw the aramaic name for Jesus and it is one of the recurring words in my prayer language. I always wanted to know. Initially, when the Holy Spirit came, there was a loud wind in my ears and the languages flowed from dialect to dialect - African, American Indian and aramaic (I guessed).
Anyway, thank you!
Ralph Ellis in Eden in Egypt/Tempest and Exodus wrote tht Hor means "Hewn out" as in 'Cave'. And tht the full word is EL Hor (Hewn out by El). Ths would mean tht Abraham was not just a Canaanite but of the cave-dwelling HAIRY BARBARIANS of Igboland. This explains why Esau his son was a hairy Barbarian. Canaanites were the metallurgists of NsuKKa, where the Igbo God Ele has MOUTH
ReplyDelete(An/On/Onu) of his Underground Duat. The word Nile in ancient times might most likely have meant Niger (its Mother River). Nok is a tiny village in Plateau state, NOKWA in Anambra where the Canaanite Awka metallurgists. Emigrated after the Deluge is more likely. Nokwa tradition is matarchal. So is much of Anambra, whose Igbo dialect Abraham spoke.
How can the Hebrew Lineage pass down from Mother, when all the Chronologies in the Bible are from father to son or sons.
ReplyDeletePlease explain
Yisrael Abshalom
Yisrael,
ReplyDeleteShalom, my friend.
There are two different matters here. Bloodline is traced through the mother. This is because the Messiah is conceived by the Woman without the seed of an earthly father. Messiah's father is the Creator God.
The royal priestly line of descent is traced through fathers because only men served as priests. The genealogies of Genesis are king lists.
Olá Alice, quando você diz que "é porque o Messias é concebida pela mulher SEM a semente de um pai terreno" ??? E que o 'deus criador' é o pai do Messias ???
ReplyDeleteAi vejo que temos que SAIR pelo menos por algum momento do PAP+EL e procurar outras evidências, ai encontraremos que esse pai que NÃO é terreno é o mesmo "ENKI" ???
Desculpe ai o incomodo, suas informações nos traz situações que RENOMADOS pelo mundo NÃO querem admitir pois, NOÉ e etc., ESCONDEM os nomes de suas esposas, e quando vamos pesquisando FUNDO, chegamos até UR na SUMÉRIA/MESOPOTÂMIA onde encontramos os parentes do "deus ANU" com nomes de NAAMAH, SARAH e etc., e a homenagem 'aos deuses' constinua até os nossos dias, nesse local, TERÁ já era MUITO conhecido pelo nome de "TIHRU", ou seja o mesmo desde sempre, inclusive no intitulado PAP+EL inspirado.
Abraço.
REPMAJ25, Abraham's Anu ancestors were among the Saharo-Nilotes who expected a Righteous Ruler to be born of a virgin who would be overshadowed by the Sun as a sign of divine appointment. There would be no earthly father. The Messiah was to be the Seed of the Creator born of the Woman (Genesis 3:15) So the Creator God is understood to be "God the Father."
ReplyDeleteThere were many names for this Creator in the ancient world: El, YHWH, Ra, etc. He was known as the Giving God or the Good God by the ancient European descendants of the Saka and Kushan. See this: http://biblicalanthropology.blogspot.com/2015/09/the-giving-god.html
This God was supreme over all and pure. Thiru, tiru are words that refer to purity. The Hebrew root thr = to be pure, corresponds to the Hausa/Hahm toro = clean, to the Amarigna (Ethiopia) anatara = pure, and to the Tamil tiru = holy. All are related to the proto-Dravidian tor = blood. In some Kushitic languages mtoro means rain and toro refers to God. The ancient Egyptian word ntr = deity is related.
Abraços para você.
Alice, devorei DOIS textos seus (depois na medida do possível, vou ler os outros), já entendi de pronto, pois, pesquiso MUITO sobre tal, já a muitos anos, como autônomo, venho tentando me esclarecer sobre situações QUE faltam no PAP+EL intitulado de inspirado. Acompanhei também a sua troca de informações com a KELLEY, que tem também um excelente conhecimento sobre tal.
ReplyDeleteAlice, faço pequenos vídeos (de pouca duração) sobre vários assuntos que no final quando junto, e por mais BIZARRO que pareça, TUDO bate com relação a alguma coisa que falta que os RENOMADOS pelo mundo NÃO nos passam. Te pergunto: esse seu material pode ser copiado passando para frente em uma tentativa de abranger um maior número de pessoas que possivelmente, NUNCA ouviram falar de tais situações ???
Te pergunto isso pois, QUANDO deparei muito antes, com a palavra HABIRU, e quando falo para pessoas sobre, elas me intitulam LOUCO, deixo para lá pois, a maioria está ENFIADA no PAP+EL, e uma outra possibilidade os confunde devido NÃO saberem do que se trata.
Caso possa copiar . . . Aguardo sua resposta e SIM ou NÃO.
Desde já agradeço a sua atenção. Meu respeito pelo seu conhecimento indo FUNDO nas pesquisas na tentativa de esclarecer quem queira e, abraço.
This research is good. It has never been shown to be false, never been refuted.
ReplyDeleteThe word "Habiru" is "Hebrew" in English Bibles. In the ancient world, the Habiru/Hebrew were a caste of royal priests who served as the "high places" - see this:
http://biblicalanthropology.blogspot.com/2015/09/the-high-places.html
You are not crazy. It is the action or habit of a wise person to seek to understand.
Thank you for reading Just Genesis, my friend.
Olá Alice, obrigado pela resposta.
ReplyDeleteSó faltou a sua resposta se posso copiar sua informações para fazer pequenos vídeo, mencionando seu NOME como a fonte ???
Aguardo sua resposta.
Abraço.
REPMAJ25,
ReplyDeleteClaro que você pode copiar as informações, e de crédito a este blog.
Abraço.