What happened to the Igigi after they revolted? Aren't the Annunaki really Nibiruans?
The Internet Anagram Server : Anagrams for: nungalene
nun-gal-e-ne is an anagram for annul gene.
Annul means to make void or null; abolish; cancel; invalidate
Here are some more notes on the Igigi themselves. I'm really up to my neck this week, but I will have a lot more time after that. I hope that you can glean something from this, and I apologize in advance for the
scattered nature - I usually put these together before publishing, and I have not had the time.
OK, I have to tell you. One of the visitors to my site gave me an image that he drew from an
abduction memory. I recognized it, not as cuneiform, but as the original pictographic symbols
used by the Sumerians perhaps a thousand years earlier than cuneiform, or much more.
I have translated it and it is a complete and clear message. It's life changing and exciting,
so I will be in and out of the internet while I finish getting it out to the public. Skeptics will be puking.
Igigi was a term used to refer to the gods of heaven in Sumerian mythology. Though sometimes synonymous with the term "Annunaki," in one myth the Igigi were the younger gods who were servants of the Annunaki, until they rebelled and were replaced by the creation of humans.
Sumerian paradise is described as a garden in the myth of Atrahasis where lower rank deities (the Igigi) are put to work digging a watercourse by the more senior deities (the Anunnaki).[2]
When the gods, man-like,
Bore the labor, carried the load,
The gods' load was great,
The toil grievous, the trouble excessive.
The great Anunnaku, the Seven,
Were making the Igigu undertake the toil.[3]
The Igigi then rebel against the dictatorship of Enlil, setting fire to their tools and surrounding Enlil's great house by night. On hearing that toil on the irrigation channel is the reason for the disquiet, the Anunnaki council decide to create man to carry out agricultural labour.
Igigi/Igigu (a group of gods)
This Semitic term describes a group of possibly seven or eight gods. It is likely that the god Marduk was considered by the Amorites to be one of the Igigi, but the total membership in this group is unclear and likely changed over time.
Like the term Anunna, the term Igigu is equally complicated and in need of a comprehensive new study. Igigu, which is likely of Semitic origin, indicates a group of gods in the Mesopotamian pantheon. It is, however, not entirely clear what distinguishes the Igigu from the Anunna.
The story of Atrahasis, the Babylonian story of the Flood and a precursor to the flood story in the Gilgameš Epic (Tablet XI), offers some evidence on the relationship between the Annunaki and the Igigu. The poem begins with the lines "When the gods like men bore the work and suffered the toil, the toil of the gods was great, the work was heavy, the distress was much" (lines 1-4) (Lambert and Millard 1999 [1969]: 43). The composition continues: "The Seven great Anunnaki were making the Igigu suffer the work" (lines 5-6) (Lambert and Millard 1969 [1999]: 43). What follows is partly fragmentary, but seems to indicate that the Igigu gods did not want to work any more and therefore the Anunnaki had to find a solution. Ultimately, this led to the creation of humans, who from then on had to bear the gods' work. In this story it appears that the Igigu were subordinate to the Anunnaki (von Soden 1989: 341-2). It is unclear which deities were included in the Igigu group.
The term Igigu is first attested in texts from the Old Babylonian period (Kienast 1976-80: 40; von Soden 1989: 340) and only occurs in Akkadian contexts (Edzard 1976-80: 37). A Sumerian logographic equivalent of the term Igigu is nun-gal-e-ne, to be translated as "the great princes/sovereigns." This term is mentioned in a literary text that has been ascribed to the princess Enheduanna, daughter of king Sargon, the founder of the Old Akkadian dynasty (Inana C, ETCSL 4.7.3 l. 2). This particular composition is only attested in Old Babylonian manuscripts and it is unclear whether an older date can be proven. According to Edzard (1976-80: 39) it is possible that nun-gal-e-ne was originally an epithet of the Anunna gods that later became identified with the Igigu under influence from Akkadian.
Written forms:
logographic: dnun gal-e-ne, dnun-gal-meš;
syllabic and pseudo-logographic: i-gi-gu, i-gi-gi, di-gi4-gi4, di-gi4-gi4-ne, i-gi4-gu, dí-gì-gì (the latter appears first in ninth century BCE);
cryptographic: dgéš-u
Normalized forms:
Igigu, Igigi
The name Igigi instead is less used, and it almost always describes a portion of the Anunnaki (300 of them, as we read in the Enuma Elish) residing in Heaven and who occasionally went down to Earth (KI), as in the tale about Marduk marrying Sarpanit.
John Halloran, who published his last Sumerian Lexicon in 2004, on his website (Sumerian questions and answers) proposes:
a-nun-na(-k): noble stock; fear, dread ('offspring' + 'master' + genitive)
d-a-nun-na(-ke4-ne): the gods as a whole; the gods of the netherworld, as compared to the dnun-gal-e-ne, the great gods of heaven
As we see, the particle KI is completely ignored. In the first definition the final -K is translated as a genitive case, and in the second one Halloran proposes that KI would actually be KE4-NE, another genitive form as reported in his Lexicon:
ke4: often occurs at the end of a genitival compound which functions as the actor or agent of the sentence (ak, genitival suffix 'of', + e, ergative agent marker).
Another theory says that Anunnaki must be transliterated as A.nun.ak.e, where AK is a genitive (this based on Thorkild Jacobsen’s material).
But how can we trust these translation that have sense only when letting a particle out of the analysis? These translations would be acceptable if we ONLY had the form Anunna, which is actually the most used. In the Sumerian period in fact we have always Anunna or Anunna Gods occurring. It is in Akkadian times that we find the use of Anunnaki.
The fact that this form is used in Akkadian Cuneiform makes it easy to understand that it may not be an error, because the term occurs as a non-subordinated form.
The already mentioned Sumerian Lexicon has:
igi: n., eye(s); glance; face; aspect, looks; front (reduplicated ig, 'door') [IGI archaic frequency: 21]. v., to see.
gi(4): to surround, besiege; to lock up (circle + to descend into).
gi(17): n., young man (small and thin like a reed).
By using these rendering and transliteration, we can extend the ‘young man’ meaning to talk about the younger gods, or the ‘to surround/besiege’ can be a validation of the concept that Igigi were described as the gods that remained in the sky, surrounding the earth.
Besides, the term IGI.GI could also be a reduplication of the root IGI = ‘to see’.
In fact reduplication of particles was often used as a plural or to mean an emphasis, like we find in the Flood Tale when the boat of Ziusudra is called:
MA2.GUR.GUR to mean a boat that can roll and turn upside-down
or the NA4.GUL.GUL in the myth called «a shir sud to Ninurta»
In this case, the emphatic use of IGI reduplicated is consistent with the meaning of ‘The Watchers’, the same term used in the Bible to identify the Nefilim.
in the Atra-Hasis flood myth the Igigi are the sixth generation of the gods who have to work for the Anunnaki, rebelling after 40 days and replaced by the creation of humans.
In the Epic of Creation, it is said that there are 300 lgigu of heaven.
A recent and comprehensive study of the term Anunna is still lacking; such a study is made more difficult by the term having slightly different meanings in different time periods.
Igigi
Mesopotamian - The younger Sumerian sky-gods.
"Igigi - E-GEE-GEE, Sumerian, 'Those Who Stayed In The Heavens, Sky
A N - the - F A T H E R,
the Supreme
The Epic of Gilgamesh
According to the epic, before the creation of humans, the Igigi, referred to as the gods of heaven, did all the work. Working for the Annunaki, a group of senior gods, the Igigi dug the beds of the rivers Tigris and the Euphrates, built canals and other waterways that enabled cultivation to provide sustenance for all. After many such years of hard work, the Igigi rebelled against Enlil, the god who was ruling earth and happened to be their taskmaster. The gods then held court and decided that the work was indeed too difficult for the Igigi and that they should find a way for them to be relieved of this hard labor. The council of gods eventually agreed upon creating primeval humans as a substitute for the Igigi. Enki, the wise god, was tasked with creating humankind. In order to create humankind Geshtu-e (also referred to as Ilawela), a young god whose name meant ‘one who has intelligence’ was sacrificed. Enki, along with the mother goddess Mami, then created humans from the flesh and blood of Geshtu-e mixed with clay and some spit from the other gods.
“And the Lord of the Watchers dwells, it is said, among the Wastes of the IGIGI, and only Watches and never raises the Sword or fights the idimmi, save when the Covenant is invoked by none less than the Elder Gods in their Council, like unto the Seven Glorious APHKHALLU.” ( Conjuration of the Watcher )
The Anunnaki (also transcribed as: Anunna, Anunnaku, Ananaki and other variations) are a group of Mesopotamian (Sumerian, Akkadian, Assyrian and Babylonian) deities. The name is variously written "da-nuna", "da-nuna-ke4-ne", or "da-nun-na", meaning something to the effect of "those of royal blood" or 'princely offspring'. Their relation to the group of gods known as the Igigi is unclear — at times the names are used synonymously but in the Atra-Hasis flood myth they have to work for the Anunnaki, rebelling after 40 days and replaced by the creation of humans.
Their relation to the group of gods known as the Igigi is unclear — at times the names are used synonymously but in the Atra-Hasis flood myth they have to work for the Anunnaki, rebelling after 40 days and replaced by the creation of humans.
The Anunnaki appear in the Babylonian creation myth, Enuma Elish. In the late version magnifying Marduk, after the creation of mankind, Marduk divides the Anunnaki and assigns them to their proper stations, three hundred in heaven, three hundred on the earth.
The length of time "40 days" is used in antiquity when an unknown amount of time has passed. eg. It rained for 40 days and 40 nights.
But if you look at the word Igigi (often described as minor gods, watchers), Igi = 'eye', self-explanatory; and gi = 'to deflower' as in to penetrate sexually.
i = to bring out
giggi
giggi or gig [BLACK] wr. giggi; gi6-gi6 "(to be) black" Akk. salmu
gi = bird
gi = night
giggi to be black
a gi
a gi [DEFLOWER] wr. a gi; a gi4 "to deflower" Akk. naqabu
giggi
giggi [BLACK] wr. giggi; gi6-gi6 "(to be) black" Akk. salmu
ig
ig [DOOR] wr. gešig; ig "door" Akk. daltu
igi [EYE] wr. igi; i-bi2; i-gi "eye; carved eye (for statues)" Akk. inu
Daniel 4:13, 17, 23
Massoretic Text OT Hebrew
Daniel 4:13 L
I saw 1934 2370
754
751 in the visions 2376 of my head 7217 upon 5922 my bed, 4903 and, behold, 431 a watcher 5894 and an holy one 6922 came down 5182
750 from 4481 heaven; 8065
Massoretic Text OT Hebrew
Daniel 4:23
And whereas x1768 the king 4430 saw 2370
754 a watcher 5894 and an holy one 6922 coming down 5182
750 from 4481 heaven, 8065 and saying, 560
750 Hew y1414 z0 the tree y363 down, 1414
3 and destroy 2255
740 it; yet 1297 leave 7662
747 the stump 6136 of the roots 8330 thereof in the earth, 772 even with a band 613 of x1768 iron 6523 and brass, 5174 in the tender grass 1883 of x1768 the field; 1251 and let it be wet 6647
721 with the dew 2920 of heaven, 8065 and [let] his portion 2508 [be] with 5974 the beasts 2423 of the field, 1251 till 5705 x1768 seven 7655 times 5732 pass 2499 over 5922 him;
Were all the Anunnaki guilty of human defiling? Who knows. But if you look at the word Igigi (often described as minor gods, watchers), Igi = 'eye', self-explanatory; and gi = 'to deflower' as in to penetrate sexually. So it seems to me that the Igigi are not simply 'minor gods' or ‘watchers’ afterall, but a specific term for the watchers who took human wives.
that a 'watcher' seems to be a thought-form as it is drawn from the word 'egregore' or 'igigi', and they exist on the astral plane fed by the energy generated by human thought and emotion,
Watchers are Guardians that feed on you.Nephilims are hybrid children of man and angel.
l. The word egregore comes from the Greek word egregoroi, which, when translated into English means ‘watcher.’