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Mesopotamia
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Is it there any link that relates with each other peoples that
apparently are quite different? Is it there any relationship between
Sumerians, Hurrians, Mitanni, Habiru, Hyksos, Kassites, Chaldeans,
Medes, Khwarezmians, Scythians, Massagetas, Alans, Sabirs, Avars, Huns,
Magyars, OnOgurs, Khazars, Uyghurs and a present-day European nation?
Can these peoples, having different origins - namely Kushitic, Semitic
and Japhetic - converge into the ethnogenesis of a single modern
nation? The answer to these questions is: Yes!
Indeed, most of the peoples mentioned above had vanished leaving hardly
any trace of themselves; yet, it is unlikely that entire nations that
have even ruled over vast empires disappear: after their defeat or
collapse, they have to be sought for somewhere else, known under
different names.
A further query: May two different, unrelated modern nations be
mysteriously linked by a thread running through history of mankind
since the dim and distant past, namely since the very beginnings of
recorded history? May they still be organized States as they were then,
after having undergone migrations, wars, exiles, and even temporarily
"disappeared" from the historic scene? Also to these questions, the
answer is: Yes!
This is the case of Hungarians, a "non-European" people of Europe, and
their enigmatic connexion with the Hebrew people... In fact, Hungary
has not only been one of the most important centres of development of
Jewish and Romany culture – not by chance –, but it is also certain
that a good amount of Hebrew blood flows through the veins of the
non-Jewish Hungarians... more than commonly thought.
The complexity of this research requires an accurate, detailed
fragmentation of topics arranged like the pieces of a puzzle, that may
be understood once they all have been properly placed together in a
meaningful order.
The Legends of Origins
There are very few records of the Hungarian ancient history except
two myths of the origins, so that they have to be taken as the first
reference in order to understand their beginnings through their own
oral traditions. These two accounts are the Legend of the White
Stag and the Legend of the Turul Hawk.
Both of them, surprisingly for an Eurasian people of the steppes,
mention characters having Biblical and ancient Mesopotamian names!
Unlike other Asian or European myths, that may have some resemblances
with the most ancient legends of the Middle East but usually with a
completely different nomenclature, the Hungarian accounts keep the
original names.
The Legend of the White Stag ascribes the origin of the
Hungarians to the merging of three peoples: Huns, Magyars and Alans.
Since the Alans, together with the Yazyg and Roxlans are classified as
Massagetas in early records and as Sarmatians in later ones, henceforth
the terms "Alan", "Yazyg", "Roxlan" and "Massageta"
will be mentioned as "Sarmatian" in order to make this essay
more intelligible, avoiding synonymous or quasi-synonymous terms
(unless specification is required). They are identified with the Moshkhi
of the Assyrian chronicles and Meshekh of the Bible. For a
detailed information on this topic, please see Eurasians and Sarmatians.
This legend starts with Tana, that is undoubtedly the same as
the Sumerian Etana of the city of Kish (Kush) and who is
equivalent with the Biblical Kush, the father of Nimrod – The Kushan
Scythians also had an ancestor called Kush-Tana. The Sumerian
Etana was the first mighty one on earth who wanted to visit heaven, and
did. This story coincides with the Biblical account concerning Nimrod,
though it is feasible that Nimrod set up the construction of the Tower
of Bavel on behalf of his father, being coherent with the Babylonian
myth in which the founder of Babylon was Bel, the father of Ninus
(Nimrud), that was the first king. In the Hungarian account, the son of
Tana is Ménrót or Nemere (Nimrod), who had twin sons
called Magor and Hunor. Also Nimrud's wife, Anuta/Bau,
has similar names in the Hungarian version, Eneth/Boldog-asszony.
The Assyrian accounts refer that Nimrud had twin sons, one of whose
names was Magor, confirming the Hungarian myth.
The legend says that Hunor and Magor were pursuing a female stag that
led them into a foreign land and there she vanished without leaving any
trace. The disappointed hunters however, met there two sisters,
princesses of the Sarmatians, kidnapped and married them, becoming the
forefathers of the Huns and Magyars. The stag is also relevant in
Scythian mythology – the role of Scythians will be considered
afterwards. It is significant that in the Hungarian legend the sons of Ménrót/Nemere
were hunters, and Nimrod in the Bible is described as a "mighty hunter"
(Genesis 10:9). His Sumerian name – or better, his title – was Nimb-ur-shag,
meaning "Lord of the Panthers", which in Hungarian is translated
"Parduc-Uraság", conveying the same meaning of the Hebrew name quoted
in the Bible, related with the word "nimra", that means "panther,
leopard", combined with the verb "rad", that is "to subdue". Therefore,
the first part of the Sumerian name resembles the Hebrew one, but the
second component is definitely quite similar to Hungarian. It is
relevant that Nimrod had to "subdue" panthers in order to become a
"mighty" hunter: this title is often misinterpreted as he being a
leopard-hunter – because it was the most dangerous animal in those
times – but the actual meaning is another; in fact, the "lord" or
"subduer" of the panther, implies that he was able to tame these
animals in order to use them as a valuable aid in hunting other wild
beasts. Indeed, also the kings and notables of Central Asia (from where
the Hungarians departed towards Europe) trained the panthers to employ
them in hunting. Panther skin has traditionally been the most precious
garment among Hungarian kings and leaders, recalling the very fashion
in which Nimrod himself was portrayed.
The historian Yosef ben-Gorion ha-Kohen, also known as Yosippon,
thought that Ménrót was to be identified with the first
Egyptian king Menes, later merged with the Mesopotamian Nimrod,
and his wife Eneth with the Egyptian female deity Neith.
The second account is the Legend of the Turul Hawk, a
mythical bird identical to the Sumerian "Dugud", that is the
emblem of both the house of Attila the Hun and the house of Árpád. This
story is about Emeshe, a Sumerian princess that was sterile
until the Turul hawk came down from heaven and gave her
fertility. She was married to Ügyek, the king of Scythians, of the
lineage of Magog – in agreement with the Assyrian chronicles, that
report Magog as the founder of the Scythian nation in northern
Mesopotamia. Emeshe conceived Álmos (the same name of Árpád's father,
that was a descendant of Attila the Hun), and in her dream she saw her
descent as a river flowing from her womb that was growing towards the
west, passing over the mountains and from which a great golden tree
arose, representing a royal lineage of kings ruling in a far away land
in the west. This story recalls the dream of the Mede king Ištumegu
(Astyages) concerning his daughter, from whose womb he saw spring a
river that flooded the earth, and in a second dream he saw a grape vine
growing from her womb that became a mighty tree that covered the
continent. These dreams were interpreted as a royal line from his
daughter's offspring that would have built an empire, though dethroning
him. The parallelism between both legends is amazing. Indeed, there is
a relationship between ancient Medes and Hungarians, that will be
exposed later in this essay.
The characteristic aspect of this story, that credits the actual
Sumerian origin of Magyars, is that Álmos is described as dark
complexioned and black-eyed, namely, a Kushite. His name means
"dreamer", since according to the legend he was conceived after his
mother's dream.
Even though the most widely accepted hypothesis regarding the origin of
Hungarians has been the Finno-Ugrian theory (promoted mainly by
Austrians for political reasons), the fact that Hungarian legends have
an indubitable Mesopotamian origin and that Magyar language has been
proven essential to decipher Sumerian writings leads research in a
different direction. Cuneiform writing was also found to be used by the
Hungarians long before they entered the Carpathian Basin. However,
language is only one of the elements to be considered, as there are
others more relevant, like cultural features and spirituality of
Hungarians, that show remarkable differences from Ugro-Finnic peoples
and place them unexpectedly closer to ancient Middle-Eastern, Biblical
peoples.
A recurrent characteristic that is found throughout Hungarian history
is the duality - within multiplicity: there are always two main
components assembled in such a way that they constitute a solid unity,
complementary to each other like male/female, black/white, north/south,
east/west, consisting in two ethnic unities that vary from one period
to another, resulting in the complexity that has generated all the
different approaches and theories about the origins. This duality,
expressed in the first legend through the twins Hunor and Magor,
figures of the most representative ancestors of modern Hungarians,
namely Huns and Magyars, existed since the very beginning: the first
pair were Sumerians and Scythians. Since there is an interdependence
between both components, before going on dealing with the Sumerians and
their evolution, it is necessary to consider the Scythians in order to
have a comprehensive view of the whole picture.
As I have written in my essay about the Eurasians, it is
not easy to define who the true Scythians really were, since such term
has been used with reference to different peoples sharing outwardly
similar characteristics. This confusion is mainly caused by Greek
historians, who were fond of creating myths and fanciful tales about
the Middle Eastern peoples, that they did not understand properly - a
clear example are the eccentricities ascribed to the Assyrian king
"Sardanapalos" (that indeed did never exist), mixing together some
actual historic facts related with four kings, Ashurbanipal II,
Ashur-etif-ilani, Shamashshumukin and Sinsharishkun, but referred as
belonging to one king alone and adding a series of oddities that were
not typical of the Assyrian character. Even the name Sardanapalus is a
distortion that may have more resemblance with Ashur-dan-apal or
Ashur-dan-apli, that reigned a century before and whose name was just
Ashur-dan (being "-apal" or "-apli" likely added by some chronicler).
So, when quoting Greek classic historians it is convenient to have in
mind that they are not quite reliable when dealing with non-Hellenic
matters. The Hungarian scholar Gyula Mészáros remarked this fact:
Nevertheless, as a much of the information we have about Scythians
comes from Greek sources, we can try to give them a coherent
interpretation, granting them credibility as founded on true facts.
Who are the "Scythians" that these historians speak about? Not the
Scythians of Herodotus or Diodorus Siculus that settled in present-day
Ukraine until the Sarmatians subdued them, namely the "authentic"
Scythians of history (properly or conventionally defined as such), but
another people that shared with those Scythians the same homeland: the
Subarians. Let us consider the assertions of the historians reported
above: they "disputed with the Egyptians about who were the oldest" and
"possessed the land of Chaldea before any other people"... It is clear
that these writers are indeed referring to the Sumerians, who were
actually the oldest established civilization and dwelled in southern
Mesopotamia, that is Chaldea. They are also regarded as "the closest
nation to the Arameans of old": this must be understood not ethnically
but geographically, as it is known that the Arameans are Semites. This
term belongs to the later period, replacing the earlier Akkadians, that
were the first Semites that inhabited Chaldea and shared this land with
the Sumerians. Therefore, these Scythians are indeed the Sumerians or
their northern counterpart, the Subarians, and may also include other
peoples of the same region and roughly the same stock, like
Hurrian/Mitanni, Sarmatians (in that period called Massagetas),
Togarmans and even Hittites.
There is still another people usually regarded as "Scythian" by many
writers, the "Askuza"
of the Assyrian chronicles, and these are the "Scythians" mentioned by
the Hungarian scholar Alfred Hámori in the following statement:
Indeed, they cannot be the Scythians that were pushed by the
Assyrians to withdraw as far away as Ukraine, but the "Ashkenazi" of
the Bible, who were engaged by the Assyrians to guard their boundaries
from Scythian plunderers. They were the forefathers of the
Scandinavians and the Rus', though in an early period they may have
been closely related with the ancestors of the Hungarians, as it might
be suggested by the enigmatic name of their leader: Madyas, a word that
recalls the land of Madja, which will be mentioned later in this
chapter as a name probably identical with Magyar.
The land of Subartu was also the original settlement of Japhetic
peoples, including the forefather of all the Scythians, Magog. This
region was ruled by the Sumerian king Nimrod, as it is written in
Genesis 10:10,11 that he extended his kingdom over [the region later
known as] Assyria. It is very likely that the Japhetic nations were
subdued by the Kushite king, as the Armenian tradition also refers to
their eponymous hero, Haik son of Togarmah, as having delivered his
people from the rule of Nimrod. Consequently, it is not unlikely that
Magog's folk were once under Sumerian rule, and perhaps the Hungarian
"Magor", supposedly son of Nimrod, is to be actually identified with
Magog, son of Yefet, although belonging to a different lineage.
The land known by Sumerians as "Subar-Ki" or "Subar-Tu" was inhabited
by the Hurrians, whose language was the oldest form of Sanskrit -
consequently, the mother of all Indo-European languages! Therefore, the
Hurrians cannot be directly related with Hungarians. Yet, they were not
the only people in that region and their tongue had also many words in
common with Sumerian and Elamite, that are agglutinative languages. The
Hurrites indeed were associated with (or subdued by) the Mitanni, that
became the Hurrian élite in the same way as the Chaldeans and the Magi
in other States, as it will be exposed later in this essay. In fact,
the same country was known under different names, depending on the
people taken as reference: in Assyrian documents they are mentioned as
"Sapar-da", Egyptians called them "Magor", in Persian records they are
known as "Sabarda" and "Matiene/Mada", while the Biblical name
Haran/Charan is obviously connected with the Hurrians. Greek sources
refer to those peoples as "Sapir/Sabir", "Makr/Magar" and "Matiene".
All these terms point out to the denomination of two Hungarian tribes:
Sabirs and Magyars. These two names however, may belong to one and the
same people that probably split into two branches. The Sabirs seem to
be the oldest group from which Sarmatians originated, as they dwelled
in a vast area from Central Asia to the heart of Europe. Indeed, the
name "Siberia" (Sibir') is ascribed to them, but also the Roman name of
the western area of present-day Hungary was "Sabaria", and was indeed,
inhabited by Sarmatians (Yazyg). The writer István Gyárfás in his work
"The History of the Jász-Kun" ("The History of the Yazygs and Kumans"),
vol. I, reports that the Greek geographer Ptolemy mentioned the Jász
dwelling in present-day Szombathely, Hungary. The Jász (Yazyg) were
known by the Romans as "Sabarians" or "Savarians". Byzantine documents
concerning the Hungarian prince Termatzu from Árpád's lineage assert
that the oldest name of the Hungarians was "Sabartoi Asphali",
recalling their ancient Mesopotamian name Subar-tu and Sabir-ki, while
Asphali was the Arab name of the Lower Zab river, in Assyria. Professor
Csaba Hargita suggests another possible explanation: if they were
speaking of themselves on their own language, Hungarians may have said
"azfile Szavardok", that is "a kind of Sabartians", as it is an usual
answer to say "I would be a kind of..." that could be heard by the
Greeks like "Asphaloi Sabartoi".
In reference to the Mitanni, the northern Mesopotamian region was also
known as "Mada/Mata/Madja" (not to be confused with Maday, the land of
the Medes, that was beyond the eastern border of Assyria). The term
that may be transliterated as "mat", "madh", "madj" means "country" or
"district" in Sumerian, Subarian, Parthian, and other related
languages, and it was also used by the Assyrians and Egyptians with the
same meaning. Notice that in those languages, the phoneme "dh" or "dj"
is equal to the modern Hungarian "gy", and "megye" is still "district"
or "province" in Hungarian. Therefore, if the denomination has been
transferred along the generations, the Magyars might be the ancient
tribe of Mitanni. The territory of the Mada or Mitanni is referred by
some Egyptian documents as Magor. There are many other linguistic
evidences that prove the close relationship between modern Hungarian
and Sumerian/Subarian tongues; for example, in Hurrian/Subar language,
the word "tarshua" means "all the people", while in Sumerian "shag"
conveyed the meaning of people as well as head or high. In Hungarian,
the combination of both is seen in "társaság", that means "society";
"köztársaság" is "republic" (notice that "s" in Hungarian sounds like
"sh"). Also the name of the horse, warhorse and chariot in Hungarian
are found in Northern Mesopotamia.
Therefore, the Scythian component of the Hungarian ancestry was closely
associated with the descent of the ancient Mitanni.
Herodotus asserted that the Sarmatians were the offspring of
Scythian males with the Amazons (legendary female warriors) and that
Sarmatian women learnt the Scythian tongue, but the men could not learn
the women's language. This is somewhat unlikely; although it is known
that in Hunan, China, a written code -"nushu"- was known only by women,
who taught it only to their daughters and kept it secret from male
members of their family, it does not seem to be a spoken language and
in any case there is no proof that such a peculiarity existed among
Sarmatians. Nevertheless, this assertion of the Greek historian may
have been founded on an ancient tradition, connected with the legend of
the Turul hawk, or better with the female protagonist, the princess
Emeshe:
It is interesting to notice that Sumerians called themselves and their
language "Emegir" (a word with apparent resemblance with Magyar), while
their country was called "Kiengi". Yet, the Sumerian language was
composed of two dialects: Emegir was the "tongue of men", and Emeshal
was the "tongue of women", identified respectively as the northern and
southern dialects. Professor Hargita proposes that it would be possible
that the word "Amazons" might be associated with Emeshe and the Emeshal
language. Therefore, the legend of the Amazons and their mysterious
tongue may have been a Greek imaginative development of the Sumerian
myth.
The same figure may be applied to represent the Sumerian-Mitanni
relationship ["Emeshal/Emegir-Madja"], as two counterparts of the early
Magyar peoples.
As well as in Subartu coexisted different nations of unrelated stocks,
in Sumer emerged other people: the Semitic Akkadians, namely the early
Assyrians, and it was in Sumer where the forefather of the Hebrews was
born. The "Hungarian-Hebrew connexion" begins in Ur of the Chaldees, Ur
haKasdim of the Scriptures. Who were the "Chaldeans" of Avraham's
times? Many scholars raise objections concerning the date of the Bible
text because the Chaldeans (those of the Neo-Babylonian Empire) were
still not in that area until the 11th century
b.c.e., about a millennium later. Nevertheless, the Scriptures say "Ur
ha-Kasdim", and the Kasdim of Avraham's times not necessarily
mean the people known to us as Chaldeans, but may very well apply to
the Sumerians. On the other hand, also the name "Sumerian" has been
arbitrarily given to them by others and not by themselves, and we have
already shown how the term "Scythian" was used to indicate several
different peoples. There are evidences that the term Kasdim
referred originally to the Babylonians before the Chaldeans took
control of the city in the 8th century b.c.e.,
and only after Babylon became a Chaldean city the older term Kasdim
- or also Kashdim - was transferred to the new rulers, or maybe
only to a particular social class, as it will be shown later.
Consequently, those whom the ancient Israelites called Kasdim
may comprise more than one defined ethnic entity. Indeed, they may also
be the Akkadians, that were Semites as Avraham was. Notwithstanding,
Avraham is not identified as one of the "Kasdim", but is called to
leave the city where he dwelled, that belonged to the Kasdim.
He is actually called, since the beginning, a "Habiru" (Genesis
14:13), never a "Chaldean", and his brothers are called "Arameans"
(Genesis 25:20), confirming that they were Semites.
On their way to Canaan, we know that Avraham and his family stopped and
settled in Charan, the land of the Hurrians and Mitanni. It is
meaningful that, even though that was an Akkadian family, they
willingly stayed in a land whose inhabitants were closely related with
the Sumerians that they had left behind. And in fact, most of Avraham's
relatives remained there and did not go with him to the Promised Land.
That he was attached to his Semitic bloodline is evident by the fact
that he did not want that his offspring would marry other women than
his own brothers' descent - and also his brothers would have kept their
lineage pure; nevertheless, these Akkadian Habiru seem to have felt
comfortable within the Sumerian/Subarian environment, as many Jews and
Roma feel at home in Hungary since centuries...
Avraham settled in Canaan, but kept in touch with his family in
Aram-Naharayim. He visited also Egypt, where his offspring would have
sojourned some time later. He was surely regarded as an "Apiru" by the
Egyptians, but it is known that the term 'Apiru did not convey
a meaning of defined nationality, but rather a social status; this word
was used generally for Semitic tribes but they may have included also
non-Semitic people - like the term "Gypsy", that refers mainly to Roma
but not only, or even "Cossack", that is usually associated with
Russians but indeed is not related with ethnicity. So Avraham was an
Akkadian by nationality but also a Habiru. Nevertheless,
according to his original homeland and his permanent contact with his
family in Charan, he may have been also considered as one of the Kasdim.
His son Yitzchak and his grandson Yakov kept strongly bound to their
Semitic lineage and married their cousins. Then, Yakov and all his
family settled in Egypt, to stay there for a long time.
By the time of the Israelite Exodus from Egypt to Canaan, a mysterious
people arose in Southern Mesopotamia: the Kassites (Kasu). They
came from a still unknown place and after they lost control of Babylon
they retreated to the Zagros Mounts and had not any further history.
Very likely, they and not the Neo-Babylonian Chaldeans were the
authentic Kasdim. The Kassites apparently spoke a language
similar to Sumerian, if not identical, and probably they were indeed
the Sumerians that came to take their land back after having been
displaced by the Akkadians centuries before. Then the land of Shin'ar
was no longer structured as autonomous city-states but as a centralized
kingdom, therefore they founded their own capital, Dur-Kurigalzu. The
Kassites were excellent horse-riders, a feature that primarily
distinguished the peoples of the north, namely, those coming from the
land of Subartu/Mitanni, peoples that were linked with Sumerians since
the earliest times. In fact, in the Zagros region a kind of alliance
between Northern and Southern peoples might have taken place, of which
it will be discussed later in this essay. By some Kassite king names,
which are evidently Indic (for example: Shuriash = Surya,
Maruttash = Marut, Inda-Bugash = Indra-Bhaga), we can
understand that they were also influenced by Hurrians or perhaps by the
Medes, that in a later period were the owners of the Zagros and
appointed the Magi as their priestly caste. Such kind of alliances
between Sumerian/Subarian tribes and Indo-Aryan peoples seem to have
been very common, and even achieved in taking control of the whole
Mesopotamia during that period: the Kassite kingdom in the south
preceded about 90 years the Mitanni kingdom in the north, and survived
it for other 90 years.
At this point, the other meaning of the word Kasdim,
"Chaldeans", and their relationship with Sumerians allows us to link
our reasoning again with the "Hungarian-Hebrew connexion".
The dynasty that ruled over Babylon about 130 years after the Kassites
were dethroned is known as "Chaldean", the one to which Nebukhadnetzar
the Great belonged. Now let us consider who the Chaldeans are in the
Book of Daniel:
"Youths in whom was no blemish, but well-favoured, and skilful in all wisdom, and endowed with knowledge, and understanding science, and such as had ability to stand in the king's palace; and that he should teach them the learning and the language of the Kasdim". (Daniel 1:4)
"Then the king commanded to call the magicians, and the enchanters, and the sorcerers, and the Kasdim, to tell the king his dreams. So they came in and stood before the king... Then spoke the Kasdim to the king in the Aramaic language, O king, live forever: tell your servants the dream, and we will show the interpretation. The king answered the Kasdim, The thing is gone from me: if you don't make known to me the dream and the interpretation of it, you shall be cut in pieces, and your houses shall be made a dunghill". (Daniel 2:2,4,5)
"The Kasdim answered before the king, and said, There is not a man on the earth who can show the king's matter, because no king, lord, or ruler, has asked such a thing of any magician, or enchanter, or Kasdai". (Daniel 2:10)
"Then came in the magicians, the enchanters, the Kasdim, and the soothsayers; and I told the dream before them; but they did not make known to me the interpretation of it". (Daniel 4:7)
"The king cried aloud to bring in the enchanters, the Kasdim, and the soothsayers. There is a man in your kingdom, in whom is the spirit of the holy gods; and in the days of your father light and understanding and wisdom, like the wisdom of the gods, were found in him; and the king Nevukhadnetzar your father, the king, [I say], your father, made him master of the magicians, enchanters, Kasdim, and soothsayers". (Daniel 5:7,11)
It results evident that here the "Chaldeans" (Kasdim) are not
a people but a kind of social class or caste associated with the magicians,
enchanters, sorcerers, soothsayers, namely, they were astrologers,
exactly like the Magi in Persia. They probably belonged to a different
people, as they had their own language, "the language of the Kasdim",
but spoke to the king in Aramaic, the Assyrian tongue of Babylon.
Consequently, they may have been related to former rulers of the city,
restored by the neo-Babylonian kings to their influent position because
of their qualities. The likely hypothesis is that, after the Kassites
were defeated by the joint Assyrian-Elamite armies and the 2nd Dynasty
of Isin took the power, they withdrew to the Zagros Mountains, where
probably the old Sumerians settled after having been obliterated from
history by the rising Semites that took complete control over the whole
Mesopotamia. When the 2nd Dynasty of Isin came to an end, it was
replaced by the "Chaldean" Dynasty... but who were exactly these
Chaldeans and where did they come from, is still subject to discussion.
Those conventionally regarded as Chaldeans are indeed the southern
branch of the Assyrians, the descent of the ancient Akkadians, namely a
Semitic people to which the royal house belonged. It was the land that
was known by the Assyrians as Kaldu, maybe an equivalent of the
Biblical Shin'ar, having in mind the early inhabitants, the
Sumerians. Therefore, it is very likely that Sumerian was the lineage
of the Babylonian astrologers, although not that of the people and not
even the king, whose language was Aramaic, that is Semitic like Hebrew.
The mysterious language of the Kasdim should have been no other
than Sumerian. They were the holders of the religious authority and it
is a fact that the ancient Babylonian mysteries were built around the
myths of Nimrod, who was deified as Merodakh/Marduk, and Nimrod was a
Sumerian.
The presence of Hebrews in this circle is not unlikely, as they have
been always appreciated for their prophetic skills - indeed, the first
act of King Nebukhadnetzar after his conquest of Jerusalem was to
choose young Israelites to be appointed as "Kasdim", and Daniel himself
was raised to the rank of Rab-mag, head of the Magi. Also Yosef
was the Wise one of Egypt and regarded as a diviner (Genesis 44:15).
With Daniel, at least other three Jews were appointed as Kasdim:
Hananyah (Shadrakh), Mishael (Meshakh) and Azaryah (Aved-Nego). So,
from the Book of Daniel we understand that the Chaldeans were
like the Persian Magi, a social class into which individuals of
different ethnic backgrounds may be accepted if they fulfil particular
requirements and follow an initiation ritual. This spiritual
development is a characteristic that Hebrews have in a special way, so
that along history many of them have reached important positions at the
royal courts as well as in democratic institutions.
Southern Mesopotamia was inhabited by different peoples belonging to
unrelated origins, and in the neo-Babylonian period we find that a
Semitic dynasty is ruling but the early Sumerians are still present as
a very influent caste close to the king, so that the dynasty itself is
called after them, "Chaldean".
The situation in Northern Mesopotamia is even more complex: indeed,
this land is not only the heart of the Assyrian realm (Semitic), but
also the very birthplace of the Indo-Aryan languages (the old form of
Sanskrit spoken by the Hurrians), and is also the original country of
the [non-Aryan] Eurasian peoples.* Such a complexity justifies the
confusion and divergences between historians and scholars, that usually
associate peoples with languages and consequently leading their
research to a dead end.
In the early period, we find the kingdom of Hanigalbat, a joint
Hurrian-Mitanni state: we have already considered the possible identity
of ancient Magyars with the Mitanni, whose land was known as
Magor/Mada/Matiene/Subartu/Saparda, in Hurrian territory. Likewise we
know that Hungarians are not Indo-Aryan and their language is
agglutinative, not Indo-European. Yet, ancient documents reveal that
the language of Mitanni was Hurrian: there is a clear evidence of the
use of Indic vocabulary in the Mitanni documents; the gods of the
Mitanni treaties are specifically Vedic gods: Varun-a and Mitra,
Indra and N-satyau; and in addition there are a series
of names of the noblemen or aristocracy of Mitanni which are clearly
Indic, as well as the Mitanni kings: Barattarna, Saushshatar, Artatama,
Shuttarna, Tushratta (Dushratta), Sattvara (Sattiwaza), Varashatta, all
of them are undoubtedly Sanskrit names. Other Mitanni texts show Indic
words for numbers and colours. What happened then, with the presumed
Magyars? A likely explanation is the following: we have seen that the
"Chaldean" kingdom of Babylon was actually a Semitic realm, whose
inhabitants and royal family were Babylonians (namely, Southern
Assyrians), and the official language was Aramaic, but the most
influent class were the Kasdim, who had their secret language
and that very likely was Sumerian. It is also the Sumerian religion
that was adopted by the Semitic Akkadian/Assyrian/Arameans, originally
monotheistic. A similar situation is feasible that happened in the
enigmatic Hurrian-Mitanni kingdom, concerning which the scholars have
still not taken a definitive position about the relationship between
the two peoples, whether the Mitanni were the subduers or just the
denomination of the Hurrian ruling class. The most likely hypothesis is
that the Mitanni took control of the Hurrian lands in the same way as
Israelites did in Canaan: it seems that the Hurrians in fact did not
have an unified state but had their own self-governing tribal unities –
some of them were also in Canaan (Hivvites, Yevusites) and another
country in the south, around Mount Seir, that was subdued by the
Edomites. So, the Mitanni conquered the Hurrian territories in Subartu
and organized them in a solid state able to compete with their Hittite
and Assyrian neighbours and to make treaties with Egypt. Such a state
would have obviously adopted the language of the majority population,
and even the rulers may have very well taken Hurrian names and religion
in the same way as peoples of different ethnicities adopted
Christianity and western names or Islam and Arabic names. The second
possibility is that the Mitanni were like the Kasdim, not the
royal family but the most influent social class, though this should not
be the case in this period, but maybe later, after the Mitanni kingdom
was destroyed by the Assyrians.
The Assyrians introduced a new ethnic element in the land of the
Hurrians: the exiled Israelites of the Northern Tribes:
There are some controversial opinions concerning the exact location
of these places mentioned in the Scriptures, as they have been equated
with Balkh and the Khyber Pass, or Bukhara, or even the Caucasus and
the Volga Basin, where cities like Samara and Kazan remind us Samaria
and Gozan, identifications that, if they were proven right would
simplify our task as these are the lands where with certainty the
Hungarians have dwelled since old. Yet, I prefer to discard all these
supposed identifications and keep a more conservative line. Although it
is certain that Assyrians extended their conquest beyond the Caucasus,
it is also written that "Israel was
carried away out of their own land to Ashur" (2Kings 17:23), and
this implies that the land of exile was comprised within the territory
of Ashur, Assyria. Therefore, these toponyms are rather the same as the
Assyrian Halahhu and Guzana, districts of the empire in the former
Hurrian kingdom. Only the cities of the Medes are outside this region,
quite more eastwards.
The Assyrians, as all the other nations, had a circle of astrologers
close to the king, and it is certain that they appointed some of the
Israelites within this special class as well as ministers.
When Babylonians overran the Assyrian Empire, they did so in alliance
with another people that was a rising power: the Medes. It is a common
mistake to identify the Medes with the Mitanni just because of the
apparent name similarity ‒"Madai" with "Mada/Mata/Madja"‒. Although the
Persian name of Media was also Madâ; the Medes were a different
people, or perhaps a group of associated tribes of which the Madai were
the most relevant. Quoting again the Hungarian scholar Alfred Hámori, «Cyaxares was the next Mede
ruler... Their attack was unsuccessful partly because the Scythians
under Madyas sided with the Assyrians», it is clear that a name
resemblance may be misleading; the enigmatic Scythian leader, called
Madyas, was against the Medes. This scholar also asserts that Scythians
and Medes may have common roots but developed separately, as the
Scythians were mainly nomads while the Medes were city dwellers – this
may be enough reason to find both parties on different fronts. On the
other hand, also Assyrians distinguished the Medes from the Mitanni; in
the Assyrian records the Medes are called Manda or Amadai.
Concerning the geographic location, the Mitanni were to the
west/northwest of Assyria, while Media was to the east/southeast. In
fact, the Assyrian accounts report that Shalmaneser III received
tribute from the Amadai from his wars against the tribes of the
Zagros (Media). Among the names of the Mede kings, two are definitely
Indo-Aryan: Kshatrita (Phraortes), and Hwakshatra (Cyaxares) – between
them ruled Madyus, "the Scythian". What kind of Scythian was this
Madyus? An Askuza, or a Magyar, maybe?
At present there is a people that claims direct descent from the Medes:
the Kurds. It is significant that they are genetically close to
Armenians, Southern Italians, Hungarians and Ashkenazi Jews... This is
not quite surprising, as the Israelite exiles dwelled in that area for
centuries and intermarrying was unavoidable, mainly because many of
those Israelites were no longer observing the whole of the Judaic
rules. The Kurds are still dwelling in the land of the Northern
Israelite exile, namely, ancient Assyria and Haran.
Meanwhile, what happened with the Hurrians and Mitanni, of whom there
is no mention since they were conquered by the Assyrians? After the
fall of Nineveh, they were subject to Babylon, and then to the
Medo-Persian empire. In this later period, most Hurrians with part of
the exiled Israelites emigrated eastwards and founded Khwarezm. They
had to pass by the Medes' land, and it is not excluded that some
Mitanni settled among them, or among the Scythians of Media. In fact,
the land of the Medes covered a vast territory: in 836 b.c.e. the
Assyrian king Shalmaneser III received tribute from them after his
campaign against the peoples of the Zagros Mounts; then in 715 b.c.e.
Sargon II subjected them "up to the far mountain Bikni" (Elburz) and
the borders of the desert, that is in Khorassan. They remained under
Assyrian rule until the fall of Nineveh. However, concerning the
Mitanni, it is likely that a consistent group of them settled in
Atropatene (modern Adzerbaidzhan), as that land was called "Mada" - in
fact, as well as many scholars still do, the Greek historians did not
distinguish the Medes (Madai of the Bible, Manda/Amadai
of the Assyrian inscriptions, Madâ of the Medo-Persian
records) from the Mada of Atropatene; they confused both
peoples so badly that they even called "Ecbatana" the capital of the
Mada! According to pre-Hellenic documents, there was no other city
named Ecbatana besides the best-known one in Media, the present-day
Hamadan.
A further misleading factor is that the Medes were likely related with
Hurrians, at least by the Aryan elements that both peoples had in
common. As it has been said before, the Medes were rather a group of
tribes more than a homogeneous people; indeed, the "Umman-Manda" (hosts
of the Medes) of the Babylonian chronicles apparently included many
nomadic bands of probable Scythian or Sarmatian stock. According to
Herodotus, the Medes were composed by six different tribes, of which
one were the Medes properly (Madai), four of them seem to be actually
Scythian-related groups, and one is the prestigious caste of the Magi.
Who were the Magi, and which was their origin?...
The Magi indeed belonged to a particular lineage traced from the
earliest times: they were the same Kasdim of Babylon, namely,
Sumerians. With the Semitic expansion and the Akkadian rule over Lower
Mesopotamia, the displaced Sumerians moved towards the Zagros region,
from where the Kasdim returned back to Babylon as the king's
counsellors and from where the Magi that joined the Medes came
from as well. Therefore, they were two branches of the same people:
their name Magi probably referred in origin to their secret
language, Emegir, while their Semitic name was Kasdim,
meaning Sumerian ("Chaldean"). However, the Magi of Media - and later
also of Persia - probably resulted from an alliance between two
counterparts that met in the Zagros to gather and become one people:
the Sumerians and the Subarians, Emeshal and Emegir,
which reflects the constant duality of the Hungarian origins, like the
most ancient pairs: male/female, black/white, north/south, east/west, Kasdim/Magi,
Hunor/Magor... The Mitanni aristocracy joined the Chaldean one, the
once influent castes in fallen kingdoms became the Magi of the
rising Media. Of course, both the Magi of Media-Persia and the Kasdim
of the Babylonian court were just a selected class (as perhaps also the
Mitanni in the Hurrian realm), not the whole of the Sumerian/Subarian
people. Besides this particular élite, there must have been a mass of
non-aristocratic people, warriors, farmers, metal-forgers,
horse-breeders, artisans, etc., that with the privileged caste of the
Hurrian, Babylonian or Persian court had in common only the language
and genetic features.
The Magi are commonly associated with the Zoroastrian cult, yet in
origin it seems that they did not follow such religious philosophy but
the essential patterns of the ancient Sumerian religion, which they
developed as a mystery belief, and only later they joined the
revolutionary monotheistic-dualistic reformation of Zarathustra. Why
did the Magi adopt such a novelty within a polytheistic environment?
The following may be a feasible explanation:
We have already established that the Magi, like the Kasdim,
were a social class into which individuals of different ethnic
backgrounds may be accepted if they fulfil particular requirements and
follow an initiation ritual. The identity of both groups is also
confirmed by the fact that the Jewish Prophet Daniel, appointed by King
Nebukhadnetzar as the head of the Kasdim, was confirmed by King
Dareyauvesh the Mede as one of the chief officers of the Medo-Persian
Kingdom, a position that was a privilege of the Magi. On the other
side, the very identity of Zarathustra is shrouded in mystery, and even
the period in which he lived is uncertain. If the conventional date is
correct, he should have lived some few years before Daniel, and was his
contemporary for a while. Also his birthplace is subject of
controversy, but the most commonly accepted one is Mada Atropatene,
although his preaching is said to have taken place in Khwarezm. Also
the original Zoroastrian philosophy is not known in detail as many
things were added in later times, but it was essentially presented as
the only widely known monotheistic belief in the Ancient World besides
Judaism. Notwithstanding, there are some interesting elements
concerning places and period: Mada Atropatene was a Mitanni settlement,
Khwarezm was a Hurrian realm, and since the 7th century b.c.e. a
consistent Israelite component was added to these peoples. As well as
Daniel and at least three of his companions were appointed as ministers
at the Babylonian court, it is very likely that some Israelites took
similar positions at Nineveh –at least we know of Ahiqar, who may be
only a legendary character, but may also be a real person. Also
Assarhaddon's wife Naqi'a (Zakutu) was either an Israelite or an
Aramean. After the fall of Nineveh, some of the Northern Israelites
joined the Hurrians and Mitanni on their way eastwards, carrying with
them their consciousness of the One God that they worshipped in the
past. Consequently, Zarathustra may have been an Israelite, who was
appreciated by his prophetic gifts at the court of Vishtaspa and
promoted to the rank of Rab-mag in the same way as Daniel and
probably Ahiqar. The land where it is thought he was born was inhabited
by Mitanni, the one where he preached was founded by Hurrians, in both
of them there were also Israelites.
Even though the number of Northern
Israelites deported was not so enormous (besides the 27,290 claimed by
Sargon II we may guess that those previously exiled by Tiglat-Pileser
III may double that amount), after two centuries they should have
become an important component within the Mesopotamians, and not only
influenced the priestly caste but also the common people. Besides these
figures, if the Prism of Sennakherib is reliable, he exiled 200,250
people from Judah − although it is known that he failed in taking
Jerusalem having great loss within his army, a fact that the most
arrogant of Assyrian kings obviously did not mention. Nevertheless, he
may have taken captives from the other cities of Judah during his
campaign, as he himself settled at Lakish. The deportees of Judah were
very likely resettled together with the Israelites of previous
deportations. Part of the Israelites were relocated in the "cities of
the Medes", a vague definition that may comprise from the Zagros region
to the lake Urmiah. Besides this, as it was said before, the Magi were
probably the result of an alliance between two counterparts that met in
the Zagros, namely the Sumerians and the Mitanni, these ones already
having Hebrews among them. Consequently, the adoption of Zoroastrianism
by the Magi may be a direct influence of some Israelites that occupied
key positions within their caste. It is significant that the
Medo-Persian monarchs were quite sympathetic towards the Jews - one of
the first Imperial decrees concerned the return to their homeland and
the order to rebuild Jerusalem and the Temple. The Parthians followed
the same favourable policy.
The Assyrians did not only introduce the Israelite element in the
Mesopotamian and Iranian population, but also carried away some of
these peoples to Samaria: Babylonians, Elamites, Arameans,
"Apharsathkites" (Aparni), and "Dehites", that is Dahae (Scythians).
These immigrants intermarried with the Israelites left in Samaria and
became Jewish after some centuries, so that in the only Hebrew records
existing from the 1st century c.e., the Gospels and Josephus, we find
that there were the Jews properly and others that were Jews by belief,
but technically Goyim: the Galileans – indeed, their land was
called "Galil haGoyim" (the Samaritans have a different background, but
it is off-topic here). There were also some strange connections and
spiritual movements that flourished mainly in Galilea, of which the
best known were the Essenes, whose philosophy was close to that of the
Magi – the reason of such a coincidence may be found in the ethnic
origin of the Galileans.
Of course, as it was elucidated before, the Magi by themselves were not
an ethnic group but belonged to a people of Sumerian-Mitanni origin, to
which the Israelites were added. Who are these peoples today is what
this essay is concerned about. Going back to the Hungarian legend, it
says that Nemere/Ménrót asked his twin sons what ability they
wanted to develop: Hunor chose the art of war, while Magor preferred
wisdom. This episode may represent the covenant between two parts, or
the composition of the ancient people: wisdom as a characteristic of
the Magi, the art of war as the main feature of the Huns. Apparently,
there are not many things in common between these two groups as to
suggest such an association, but we can at least consider the
possibility that a link actually exists.
Arpakhshad and the "Habiri"
Arpakhshad was a son of Shem, a brother of Ashur, and ancestor of
the Hebrews according to the Scriptures:
The name of this mysterious ancestor of Avraham has been object of
different interpretations: being one of the Patriarchs, as well as his
brothers he must have given origin to a nation, the one from which the
Hebrews came as a branch: that nation were the Akkadians. Yet, the name
of the Akkadians is not related with their ancestor's name, and
therefore some meanings have been suggested: Arpa-Kesed, "the coast/boundary of the Chaldeans",
or else Ar-pa-Khesed, that is an Egyptian name equivalent to "Ur of the Chaldeans". These
hypotheses seem to find support in Josephus' declaration that "Arphaxad named the Arphaxadites, who are
now called Chaldeans..." (Josephus, Antiquities 1.6.4). These
interpretations are however unlikely because Arpakhshad is a proper
name and "the boundaries of the Chaldeans" do not indicate any specific
people but rather an indeterminate geographic area; while an Egyptian
terminology is completely out of place in this context. Concerning
Josephus, he probably referred to the Akkadians calling them Chaldeans,
based on the belief that Avraham was a "Chaldean" because he was born
in Ur. As we have seen before, Avraham is never called himself a
Chaldean, but that he "came out of a Chaldean city", in the same way as
Mosheh is never called "Egyptian" (although he was thought to be an
Egyptian by Yethro's daughters because he came from Egypt, where he was
born, and was likely clad like an Egyptian - Exodus 2:19). The
Chaldeans (Kasdim) of the Book of Genesis were indeed the
Sumerians, not the Akkadians. Avraham is called "Hebrew" as well as
Mosheh, regardless their birthplace. Another interesting detail is that
Arpakhshad is Shem's third son, and was born two years after the
Deluge. Unless Elam was born on the Ark, which is improbable, the most
likely possibility is that Arpakhshad was Ashur's twin brother.
Regarding this hypothesis, we can find a parallel with two ancient
neighbour cities: Ashur and Arrapkha. From this viewpoint, the identity
of Arpakhshad with Arrapkha seems to be the most likely. Nevertheless,
Arrapkha was not always a Semitic land and was instead a centre of
Hurrian culture. This divergence may anyway be solved: it is known that
the Akkadians arrived in Sumer from the north, and that they were the
same stock of the Assyrians. Previous to the Semitic takeover, we know
that Nimrod extended his Sumerian kingdom over Northern Mesopotamia,
and even Kalah, in the very heart of Assyria, was called Nimrod during
the Assyrian dark ages. Therefore, it is feasible that the two original
Semitic centres, Ashur and Arrapkha were colonized by Sumerian/Subarian
peoples. While the Semites of Ashur remained in their original
settlement, those of Arrapkha moved southwards and settled in Akkad,
taking that city from the Sumerians and later the whole land. Arrapkha
was first annexed to Assyria by Shamshi-Adad I about 1810 b.c.e. but
conquered by the Mitanni by 1470 b.c.e., and remained a Hurrian city
until the Assyrians took it back after they completely obliterated the
Mitanni kingdom in 1270 b.c.e. The Semitic cultural identity of
Arrapkha by the time of Avraham, ten generations after Arpakhshad, is
proven by the Tablets of Nuzi, which show surprising coincidences with
the Pentateuch concerning social practices and laws regarding family
life, marriage, adoptions, birthright, blessings, trade, etc. In the
tablets, also Habiru are mentioned, and a particular law that
established that a Habiru servant can be hired for a maximum
period of seven years, then must be left free (cf. Exodus 21:2).
Through the centuries and different ruling powers, the region of
Arrapkha/Nuzi remained a meeting point of Semitic and Subarian
cultures.
Now, what relationship has all this with our topic? It was said before
that this essay is arranged like a puzzle, and this is one of the
pieces... The geographic location of Arrapkha by the eastern border of
Assyria on the way towards Media is relevant, as the descent of
Arpakhshad may have been split following different directions. We only
know the lineage of Avraham because it was recorded in the Scriptures,
but obviously there were other descendants. The main line of the
"Arpakhshadites" were the Akkadians of history, a branch of them were
known as Habiru, others may have been assimilated into the
Hurrian/Mitanni groups, or migrated eastwards, adopted Indo-European or
Sumerian-related languages, settled as far as India or Central Asia -
as the Sumerians had since old intense trade with Harappa and the Indus
Valley civilizations. They may have prepared the ground for a future
reception of Jewish exiles or favourable laws in the lands where they
ruled.
Notwithstanding, apparent name resemblances should be considered
carefully in order to avoid speculative theories; please see: Names,
Languages and Ethnicity.
In the table of nations of Genesis 10, there are two Patriarchs who are
mentioned in a special way as particularly important within their
respective groups: one is Nimrod, renowned among the descent of Cham of
whom is grandson through Kush, and 'Ever (conventionally
written "Heber") as an illustrious descendant of Shem, and his
great-grandson through Arpakhshad. He is so relevant among the Semites
that Shem himself is called "the father of all the children of
'Ever" (Genesis 10:21). An essay concerning this subject is
available at: Habiru – that is the
name with which 'Ever's offspring was known in the dawn of
history. The Habiri existed since the most ancient times. They
are present in the first documents available to us, hundreds of years
earlier than Avraham. They were scattered all over the Near East from
Egypt to Mesopotamia, to the extremities of Assyria, along the coast of
the Mediterranean through Canaan, and in the regions of Anatolia. They
are not limited to any geographical area, any nation, or any social
category; they appear at every level of society, in many different
activities. They usually wandered from place to place. The movements of
Terah, Avraham, and other members of that family were according to the
habits of the general Habiri people. They certainly played an
unique role in reconnecting us with the remote history of mankind. They
also brought a genetic line down into historic times, with Avraham
chosen as the outstanding representative of that blood blessing. The Habiru
had a Deity whose Name was unknown to the other peoples, and also to
themselves, as the Name was not revealed to anybody before Mosheh
Rabainu. The fact that their Divinity's name was unknown is a further
proof that identifies them with the "Children of 'Ever".
Strictly speaking, the term Habiru would be equal to Hebrew,
consequently, indicating a Semitic people of the lineage of 'Ever.
Yet, the ancient records attest that there were also non-Semitic
elements among them, particularly Subarian. 'Ever's descent was
divided in two branches: a southern group (Yoqtan) and a northern group
(Peleg). The Habiri of the ancient accounts belong to the line
of Peleg. Besides this, it is important to distinguish two phases
concerning their history: an early stage in which they are found mainly
in Mesopotamia and Anatolia, in pre-Avrahamic times, and a later period
that begins with their appearance in Egypt, that is recorded in
connection with the arrival of Avraham's tribe in that land. While the
northern branch of the Habiru gets progressively assimilated
within the peoples of that region, the 'Apiru of the Egyptian
accounts still exist as a distinguishable group until their settlement
in Canaan, when the term Habiri/'Apiru is replaced by Israelite,
the only Hebrew group that kept an identity as such.
Concerning the descent of 'Ever, the Scriptures say:
Where is that place, "Sefar, the mountain of the
east"? The equivalent in the Assyrian chronicles is the land of Sapar-da,
that is the Subar-ki of the Sumerian inscriptions and the Sapardia-Hunae
of the Persian records. In Hebrew, it is identical with Sefarad,
being written exactly like the Assyrian Saparda (f and p
are the same letter in Hebrew and Aramaic, therefore, as vowels are not
written, SeFaRaD = SaPaRDa). Notwithstanding, the exact
location of this land is not clear, as in the Sumerian sources it
indicates the traditional Subartu in Northern Mesopotamia/Eastern
Anatolia, that is the Biblical Charan, while in other documents the
same name is given to the region in the east of Assyria, namely between
Arrapkha and the southwestern shore of Caspian Sea. In fact, the
"mountain of the east" cannot be referred to the Caucasus or Ararat,
but rather to the Zagros or Elburz. This last one appears to be the
best interpretation. Only centuries later this name was applied to
Sardis and then to Spain, as the term "Sefarad" conveys also the
symbolic meaning of "end of wandering", namely, end of the Diaspora.
Nevertheless, the name Sefarad/Saparda may indicate a
population rather than a country, and then the lands where that people
dwelled: the Habiru/Subar/Mada, that inhabited in Northern Mesopotamia,
in the Caucasus, in Arrapkha and Atropatene, adopting cultural and
linguistic features of their Indo-European neighbours, yet keeping
their original characteristics. This people was a mixed company of
Semitic Habiru and Kushitic Subarians (Sefar/Sapar/Sabir)
with the Japhetic descent of Meshekh and Magog (Moshki/Mada/Magor),
that shared much of their territory with the Indo-Hurrians in the west,
with the Semitic Assyrians in the middle, and with the Iranic Medes in
the east.
The eastern location of Saparda/Sefar is confirmed by
Herodotus, that stated:
The "Red Sea" here is the Persian Gulf; Greek historians called
"Eritrean Sea" -translated "Red Sea"- the Indian Ocean and dependences
(namely, all the annexed seas and gulfs, like Aden, Oman and Persian
Gulfs, and the Red Sea properly). Colchians is the name given
by the Greeks to the peoples of the present-day Georgia in the
Caucasus, and the "Sapeires" in this list are placed between them and
the Medes, that is immediately southeast of the Caucasus, in
Atropatene. This location identifies them with the
Mada/Subarians/Sabir.
A further consideration regarding the Colchians is relevant now. Strabo
in his Geography stated:
In order
to complete the ethnic picture of this geographic region, it is
relevant to mention other complex of peoples mainly originated in Asia
Minor that moved southwards with the primary goal of conquering Egypt
and that settled in southern Canaan until they were subdued by King
David: the "Sea Peoples". There is one of them particularly interesting
to us: the Tzekelesh. They were associated with the Philistines
and their capital was Tziklag in the Negev. After their city-state was
completely annexed to Judah, they migrated westwards and settled in the
isle to which they gave the present-day name: Tzekeliyah,
Sicily. Notwithstanding, those of them that joined the Sea Peoples were
probably not the whole tribe, and some of them should have remained in
their Anatolian homeland and assimilated into the Moshkhi or Mitanni.
In fact, there are some interesting coincidences: the ancient Hun tribe
of the Carpathian Mounts known as Székely may be connected with
the Tzekelesh, and one of their sub-tribes are the Kézdi,
namely Chaldeans! One of their main cities is Kézdivásárhely, Kovászna
district, a name that may be translated as "Chaldean Marketplace"; the
same city is called by Romanians "Târgu Secuiesc", meaning "Sicul
Marketplace", identifying the Siculs with the Chaldeans. A particular
feature concerning the change of "l" into "s" from
Assyrian into Hebrew in the term "Kasdim/Kaldu" is verified
also in Hungarian, as well as the Kasu-Kasdim identity
(Kassites-Chaldeans): one of the Hun tribes were the Keszi,
which is likely the same as Kézdi [equalling Kasu with Kasdim];
on the other hand, many tribe or place names have become Hungarian
surnames, usually with the ending "-i" or "-y", that indicates origin:
common family names like Káldi/Káldy/Káltai/Káltay and some variations
of the same terms should indicate hypothetic places called "Káld/Kált",
which are not identified if not in the remote past: Káldea is Chaldea
in Hungarian - as well as there is not any place named Kézd; therefore,
Kézdi may only refer to an ancient tribe.
It may be only a coincidence that both the ancient Sicilians and the
Székely are called "Siculs" by western sources; what is not a
coincidence is that the Hungarians share most of their genetic
characteristics with Southern Italians, Ashkenazi Jews, Armenians and
Kurds. This link between Hungarians and Southern Italians may be
related with both Sicul peoples. Another tribe mentioned by Strabo in
connection with the Chaldeans and Tybareni are the Sanni, a
name that is identical with another Italic people, the Sanniti;
and it is noticeable that the Tyrrhenian Sea takes its name from the
Tybareni... It is proven that some of the Italic tribes were originated
in Asia Minor, and associated with the Tzekelesh among the Sea
Peoples there were the Shardana, probably from Sardis (a land
that later was called Sefarad), that colonized the Isle of Sardinia,
and the Danauna, whose name recalls the Daunii, that
dwelled near the Sanniti.
Back to our Habiri and the land of Sefar, there are
many hints that suggest their assimilation within the northern Kasdim,
namely, into the descent of Meshekh. They may have exerted spiritual
influence within their environment and in the future beliefs of the
peoples they generated, as we shall consider in the chapter about the
religion of the ancient Hungarians. In the travel diaries of Pethahiah
of Regensburg, written in the second half of the 12th century c.e., the
Ararat country is identified with "Meshekh Land", from where some
messengers were sent to Baghdad and those messengers related that "the
kings of Meshekh and all their Lands became Jews" and that there were
teachers among the inhabitants of Meshekh "educating their children in
Torah". However no support has been found for the theory that this
tribe as a whole or partially adopted Judaism. In any case, the Hebrew
elements among the Subarian peoples in the early period are
pre-Israelite, belonging to the descent of 'Ever, not of
Avraham – it is only after the deportations that the Israelites will
partially contribute to the ethnogenesis of these peoples, and not in
the Middle East but in Central Asia and India.
Concerning the Habiri dwelling in the eastern region beyond
Assyria "toward Sefar, the mountain of the east", they may be
recognized mainly in another enigmatic people: the Apar-di or Apar-ni,
that by the 13th century b.c.e. are found in
Central Asia, probably directly involved in the foundation of Khwarezm.