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Ashur-nirari I Iasius Esret (Esau)
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<parents>79273,79481</parents> | <parents>79273,79481</parents> | ||
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- | <wiki_page>[[wikipedia:Esau]]</wiki_page> | + | <wiki_page>[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashur-nirari_I]]</wiki_page> |
<ext>{{Project DFA-Active Research}} | <ext>{{Project DFA-Active Research}} | ||
[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fereydun |Iduniya]] | [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fereydun |Iduniya]] | ||
[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashur-nirari_I | Ashur-Nirari I]] | [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashur-nirari_I | Ashur-Nirari I]] | ||
- | It is interesting to note that according to reconstructed genealogies derived from Hittite, Egyptian, and Gaelic sources, the two wives of Esau who are decended from the Canites (Canis of Sidhe, or Formoraigh) were Ada and Aholibamah. These were the wives to which Rebekah objected. In response... Esau chose additional wives from the lineage of his parents namely Bashemath and Mahalath, the daughters of his uncle Ismael in order to please his mother. | + | It is interesting to note that according to reconstructed genealogies derived from Hittite, Egyptian, and Gaelic sources, the two wives of Esau who are decended from the Canites (Canis of Sidhe, or Formoraigh) were Ada and Aholibamah. These were the wives to which Rebekah objected. In response... Esau chose additional wives from the lineage of his parents namely Bashemath and Mahalath, the daughters of his uncle Ismael in order to please his mother. The Assyrian kings-list names Ashur-Nirari I as a son of Ishme-Dagan II while Hebrew tradition names him as a nephew and son-in-law. |
- | Scholars are divided on whether Bashemath and Mahalath were two persons or one. There are no recorded descendants of Mahalath, although Eliphas was the son of Bashemath. | + | Scholars are divided on whether Bashemath and Mahalath were two persons or one. There are no recorded descendants of Mahalath, although Eliphas is identified by Hebrew tradition as the son of Bashemath. |
The Kaskans under Hayasi-Azzi suffer the loss of their grain to locusts and migrate to the lands of Ishuwa (Esau). And set up a capital at [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sapinuwa | Sapinuwa]]. The Kaskans made Nenassa their frontier. | The Kaskans under Hayasi-Azzi suffer the loss of their grain to locusts and migrate to the lands of Ishuwa (Esau). And set up a capital at [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sapinuwa | Sapinuwa]]. The Kaskans made Nenassa their frontier. |
Revision as of 19:12, 10 August 2010
Lineage | Hanigalbat |
Sex | Male |
Full name (at birth) | Ashur-nirari I Iasius Esret |
Other given names | Едом, Исав, Esau (Hebrew), Lipit-Eshtar (Sumerian), Abdi-Tirshi (Amarna), Iardan (Gaelic), Ysav, Adomni (Greek), Edom (Red), Ishuwa (Kaskan), Ashur-nirari I (Assyrian) |
Parents
♂ Исаак Симович [Люди Святого Писания] b. about -1940 ♀ Rebecca [People of the Holy Scriptures] b. about -1585 | |
Wiki-page | [[1]] |
Events
birth: King of Sumer
child birth: ♂ Raguil [People of the Holy Scriptures]
child birth: ♂ Иеус [Люди Святого Писания]
marriage: ♀ Ada Bint Elon (Ilsengand) [Syr] , ♀ Aholibamah [Syr]
between -1529 and -1503 title: King of Assyria
about -1375 other: Welcomes the Kaskan Hayasa Azzi (Jacob Israel) and together they form a confederation of 12 Tribes.
Notes
Template:Project DFA-Active Research [|Iduniya] [| Ashur-Nirari I]
It is interesting to note that according to reconstructed genealogies derived from Hittite, Egyptian, and Gaelic sources, the two wives of Esau who are decended from the Canites (Canis of Sidhe, or Formoraigh) were Ada and Aholibamah. These were the wives to which Rebekah objected. In response... Esau chose additional wives from the lineage of his parents namely Bashemath and Mahalath, the daughters of his uncle Ismael in order to please his mother. The Assyrian kings-list names Ashur-Nirari I as a son of Ishme-Dagan II while Hebrew tradition names him as a nephew and son-in-law.
Scholars are divided on whether Bashemath and Mahalath were two persons or one. There are no recorded descendants of Mahalath, although Eliphas is identified by Hebrew tradition as the son of Bashemath.
The Kaskans under Hayasi-Azzi suffer the loss of their grain to locusts and migrate to the lands of Ishuwa (Esau). And set up a capital at [| Sapinuwa]. The Kaskans made Nenassa their frontier.
In the archaeological record of Sumer, Esau is mentioned as Lipit-Eshtar who inherited the throne of Isin from his Uncle and Father in Law Ishme-Dagan. The dating of the Sumerian records is problematic no doubt as the result of mixed age artifacts appearing in the same strata beneath and within the Shuppurak flood layer. [| Lipit-Eshtar]
According to Archaeological reconstruction of Assyrian King lists Ashur-Nirari I[Esau] appears as a son of Ishmael ibn Ibrahim, illustrating the lack of differentiation in Haningalbatese culture between actual sons and husband of one's daughter.
Sources
- ↑ James R. Court, Codex Collections from Mesopotamia and Asia Minor. Scholars Press, 1995. -
- ↑ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashur-nirari_I -
From grandparents to grandchildren
marriage: Ψ Несколько жён
death: Ізраїлеве господарство, Близький Схід, Святий Материк, Земля Піднебесна, Всесвіт Божий