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Lilith Themis (the Younger)

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Person:154274
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Lineage Hetes Scepter
Sex Female
Full name (at birth) Lilith Themis
Other last names the Younger
Other given names Thalassa (Hurrian), Títhēmi (Ancient Greek), Lilith (Hebrew), Tiamat (Sumerian), Mehet-uret (Egyptian), Nut (Egyptian), Themis (Parthian), Tethys (Luwaii)

Events

birth: Sumeria

Notes

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[| Themis] [| Lilith] [| Thalassa]


This person is mythological but appears as a Demigod in the common mythologies of Egypt, Mesopotamia, Hebrews, Assyria, and Greece. Where she is reputed to have been the wife of the First Man who equates to Adam of the Hebraic tradition.

Christian tradition does not accept the story of Lilith as a wife of Adam while, the Hebrew tradition clearly does, assigning to her the status of Demon or Fallen Angel. There is some speculation that there may have been more than one Lilith. Lilith the wife of Adam and Lilith the daughter of the pair. Some traditions even assign Eve as a daughter of Adam and Lilith however, this is not clear.

The Greek mythologies preserve the memory of Lilith as a Titan or force of nature, and the Egyptians preserve her as the Goddess Nut (Sky goddess)

Archaelogy in Mesopotamia also preserves a trace of Lilith but elaborates a bit further on the relationship by differentiating between a native and immigrant population from a land Dilmun (Early Mesopotamian Trade Partner). It must be noted that Lilith and her relationship to Adam is (as is the identity of Adam and his relationship to Even and to God) are all mythological. The earliest actual historical person who can be identified with certainty is Adam's son Cain (Seken-Ka, the Scorpion King), and Iry-Hor the son of Cain who are both preserved in both Egyptian archaeological record and Hebrew record. The identities of Scorpion's brothers (the rest of the sons of Adam) are identified through reconciliation of the Egyptian record with regard to the history of Cain as preserved in the Egyptian, Hebrew, and Greek records with those of Mesopotamia.


From grandparents to grandchildren

 
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