Before gods ruled from thrones of stone and sky, there was Inanna-the first light that broke the eternal dark. She rose from the deep, radiant and terrible, embodying the oldest paradox of creation: love and war, birth and death, the beauty that destroys and the chaos that renews. In this volume of the Anunnaki Origins Series, the journey of Inanna-Ishtar unfolds through the oldest hymns of Sumer and the radiant echoes of Akkad. She steals the sacred me from Enki, defies the decrees of Enlil, descends into the underworld, and returns reborn as the Morning Star. Her myth bridges heaven and…mehr
Before gods ruled from thrones of stone and sky, there was Inanna-the first light that broke the eternal dark. She rose from the deep, radiant and terrible, embodying the oldest paradox of creation: love and war, birth and death, the beauty that destroys and the chaos that renews. In this volume of the Anunnaki Origins Series, the journey of Inanna-Ishtar unfolds through the oldest hymns of Sumer and the radiant echoes of Akkad. She steals the sacred me from Enki, defies the decrees of Enlil, descends into the underworld, and returns reborn as the Morning Star. Her myth bridges heaven and earth, the divine and the human, revealing the earliest philosophy of consciousness encoded in clay. Drawing from original translations of The Descent of Inanna, The Exaltation of Inanna, and Inanna and Enki, this book explores the goddess as both cosmic architect and rebel spirit of the Anunnaki order. Her stories illuminate how the ancients perceived the cycles of Venus, the geometry of rebirth, and the sacred rhythm by which life sustains itself through death. Through rich narrative, historical commentary, and comparative mythological study, Inanna Ishtar unveils the divine feminine at the heart of Mesopotamian civilization-the living bridge between gods and mortals, order and chaos, creation and annihilation. She is the pulse of the heavens, the fire in the seed, the queen who descended to the underworld so that life might rise again. Her name is older than language itself. Her light has never gone out.
Riddick Dawson is a historian-author whose work moves at the crossroads of archaeology, mythology, and the hidden traditions of the ancient world. With the spirit of an adventurer and the rigor of a researcher, Dawson has dedicated his career to uncovering the forgotten narratives of humanity-from the lost cities beneath desert sands to the spectral voices of the Dead Sea Scrolls. Drawing on over two decades of study, Dawson's research dives deep into the shadowy domains of the Nephilim, the Anunnaki, and the Watchers of Genesis. His writings chart the intersections between biblical texts, Mesopotamian epics, and comparative myth, revealing startling connections that challenge orthodox timelines and conventional history. In the field, Dawson has pursued evidence across sacred landscapes-temples of Egypt, megaliths of the Near East, and mountain sanctuaries whispered about in apocryphal lore. Beyond the texts and ruins, Dawson is a storyteller. His voice-part scholar, part seeker-brings these ancient enigmas to life for a modern audience hungry to ask the deeper questions: Who were the gods of old? What legacies have they left hidden in stone and scripture? And what does their memory mean for humanity today? Through books, lectures, and his distinctive narrative style, Riddick Dawson has become a leading voice for those who walk the line between history and mystery, offering a bold vision of the past that dares to include what others dismiss as myth.
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