The First Gods
The Anunnaki, Sumerian Mythology, and the Dawn of Civilization
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Alan Barker
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
The oldest stories ever written. The gods who came before all other gods. The myths that built every civilization that followed.
Five thousand years ago, in the world's first cities, a civilization pressed its beliefs into clay. Those tablets contained the original versions of the stories the modern world thinks it knows — the Great Flood, the creation of humanity, the descent into the underworld, the hero who could not accept death. The Sumerians told these stories first, told them without apology, and told them with a brutal honesty about the nature of gods and humans that every tradition which inherited them spent centuries trying to revise.
The First Gods is the complete guide to Sumerian mythology and the Anunnaki — the divine assembly that governed the Sumerian cosmos. This is not an academic translation or a simplified retelling. It is a serious, narrative-driven exploration of the myths that built human civilization, written for readers who want the full story: where these gods came from, what they wanted, why they created humanity, what they were willing to destroy, and how their stories became the foundation of the religious and literary traditions the modern world still lives inside.
Inside this book you will find:
The Anunnaki in full — Anu the distant sky father, Enlil the storm lord who wanted humanity destroyed, Enki the clever god who saved us anyway, and Inanna the Queen of Heaven who descended into death and came back without apology.
The complete Epic of Gilgamesh — the world's oldest literature, the first hero story, the first meditation on mortality, and the first honest account of what it costs to lose someone you cannot replace.
The Great Flood before Noah — the original story, older than the Bible by a thousand years, in which the gods destroyed humanity not for moral failure but because we were too loud, and one man survived because a god found a loophole in a divine oath.
The creation of humanity as the Sumerians actually told it — not as a noble act of divine love but as the solution to a labor crisis, with all the uncomfortable implications that entails.
The Sumerian underworld — the House of Dust, where kings and slaves sat together in the same darkness, and the most powerful goddess in the cosmos was hung on a hook until Enki sent help.
The ziggurats, the divination system, the demon world, the protective spirits, and the complete cosmological architecture of the civilization that invented the city, the written word, and the question of what happens after we die.
For readers of: Mythology, ancient history, comparative religion, the history of the Bible, world history, and the kind of narrative nonfiction that treats its subjects with the intellectual seriousness they deserve.
The tablets waited four thousand years to be read again.
What they contain will change how you understand every story you have ever been told.