© bOURNE uNIVERSITY 2021

GEORGIAN RUINS DISCOVERED MAY BE

MENTIONED IN THE KAREMLASH TABLETS

Archaeologists believe ruins may be more evidence of a Caspian Sea civilization Dara recorded in Karemlash Tablets found near Tel Barbara and Tel Ghanim, Iraq Karemlash records from same period as Nurubi Fragments, some 130,000 years ago The Eemian Prophet Izal recorded to have preached at the Dara City Ruins of what archaeologists believe to be the Corean city of Dara, mentioned in the ancient Karemlash Tablets. The city was recorded to have lived before the Ice Age and was destroyed in a cataclysm. The same location is also mentioned in the Nurubi Fragments, also old tablets. Tbilisi, Georgia - The remains of a Eemian ruined city was recently discovered by a team of archaeologists from the Georgian Batumi State University of Adjara while exploring recently unearthed relics near the city of Gori. As reported by the Daily World News Wire, the scientists believe that they may have uncovered more evidence of an ancient Caspian civilization that was reported on last year. The Karemlash Tablets, revealed in the 7th Century archaeological digs of Tel Barbara and Tel Ghanim by Englishman Austen Henry Layard in the 19th century, mentions Dara in connection with the ministry of the Caspian prophet Izal. Dara, or the "City of the Gray Towers” is seen by many as a fictional geographical location or a city, while feel the reference is to an actual city-state. There are also several postulations within the scientific and historical societies that the real city was location ranging from Gori to Kaspi in the northwest region of Tiblisi. The Karemlash Tablets were discovered shortly after the Nurubi Fragments were unearthed near Nineveh by Layard during the same year. Written in the same Akkadian, scholars consider the tablets part of the same record and may have even been part of a vaster collection that has yet to be completed. Several cities and historical persons, such as Izal and King Bartok, are mentioned in both records and events take place during the same Eemian period. Field technicians working on the Dara site searching for corroborating coins, tools, jewelry or any Corean artifacts in the ancient ruins. (Insert) One of the Karemlash Tablets stone records. Some scholars also believe the after the collapse of the Caspian Sea civilization before the last Ice Age, the surviving peoples over centuries migrated to the Tigris River in Mesopotamia, where with their writing, art, building and religious way of life birthed those first, ancient 4th Millennium BC kingdoms like Sumer and Ur. Professor Giuli Sanadze of the Archaeological Sciences of Ancient Georgia, of Batumi State University stated during an interview that “The speculations surrounding the existence and eventual destruction of the Darian city vary amongst historians, folklore and even in religion.” Professor Haran Tephnadze of the Senaki Center of Archaeology during his interview shared a quote from the Karemlash Tablets, third chapter (Vol Hom, scribe), verse 32 to 39: "32: How do you flock to the whims of Ashra against the First Gods? 33: Dara - your proud city of gray towers, 34: Who arose with gold and fine things above your neighbors, Thal, Zan and Gara? 35: Then (against) our prophet Izal, brought down the stones of Our (First Gods) temple? 36: And (with) the pits of King Bartok? 37: (Of which) you sought to overthrow the lands of the Children (of Yidath) 38: And take spoil of metals, jewels and cattle. 39: Such speaketh the First Gods (through Izal) of our prophet, and bring down the walls of Dara," he recited. He went on to state that, “In 1868, Jebidiah Smith wrote in the "A Commentary on the Book of Gates" of the legendary Paleothilic civilization called the Coreans, which ranged the ancient Caspian Sea Basin region some 130,000 years ago. The Prophet Izal, he stated, ministered during this period. He wrote the city had been destroyed by a natural disaster or as a punishment by the First Gods.” Professor Tephnadze was quick to mention that, "Religious scholars can argue about allegorical interpretations. The Karemlash Tablets' maps from the Eemian period certainly show the geography of these city- states. The record bearer was precise in the locations of the city and names the same characters from the Nurubi Fragments, but these maps are in finer detail. There is no doubt with the emerging sites of Paleothilic ruins that the Caspian societies we call the Coreans did indeed emerge from primitive tribal rule into a grand, yet short, building civilization. Proof enough that the story of Cor is not a legend, but historical evidences of peoples, cities and writing." Like the Nurubi fragments, the Karemlash Tablets were written in Akkadian. Scholars believe the similar writing style may have originated in the Caspian Sea and was brought to Mesopotamia when the ancient peoples migrated to the Tigris, birthing 4th Millennium BC Sumer . (Above) A royal seal inscription on one of the building base foundations, for protection against enemies. By 2019, after more excavations and archaeological research was and is being conducted, a note to the Georgian Ministry of Antiquities, reported while field studies were being conducted in Gori, stated that: "If the text of the end of Corean Dara can be historically accepted, then there is no doubt of the destruction of the city by stones? The walls, temples and palaces had been pounded in some 'divine' hail, not unlike like Sodom, and the city state collapsed through crevasses into the ground. While the approaching Ice Age would have begun to deposit glacial barriers over the Caspian Basin, severe hail storms are not unheard of, and large storms have been known." The collapse of the Caspian civilization, according to the Nurubi Fragments. was caused by the Corean society being fragmented by political wars and agricultural decline, which in part was center to their religious beliefs. As the nations declined, mass migrations occurred to other parts of the Middle East and Upper East, searching for food and shelter. The Ice Age came and destroyed most of the abandoned cities with crushing sheets of glaciers, which, when retreated due to global warming, were mostly stone rubble and timbers. Excavations and research are currently being conducted on the Darian ruins and the Georgian Ministry of Antiquities has placed the site off limits to non government and university personnel. Archaeologists are hoping to use the chiseled maps in the Karemlash Tablets as an field guide to determine if more Caspian cities can be unearthed, or it the current find is random coincidence. There findings will be published in 2024.
BOURNE UNIVERSITY
THE BOURNE JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGY

WHAT WE KNOW ABOUT THE EEMIAN STONE

TABLETS

The Nurubi Fragments, unearthed in the excavated Nineveh mound of Kouyunjik, were discovered by English archaeologist Austen Henry Layard in 1852, where they were gathered with some 22,000 cuneiform tablets from the famous library of Ashurbanipal and shipped to the British Museum. The collection consist of some twenty four clay cuneiform tablets that describe the ministry of an ancient prophet named Izal in the Caspian Sea region and the Book of Gates that occurred some 100,000 years ago during the Eemian period. The tablets were recently discovered by records curators of the Special Middle Eastern Collection with several hundred other records in special curation vaults. The British Museum's Principal Curator has scheduled a special engagement with the Council for British Archaeology next year and have indicated the tablets could challenge the accepted theories of human civilization as they are known today. The tablets are written the Semitic characters of Akkadian, a language that was developed in the ancient Sumer around the 30th Century BC, but have carbon 14 dated some 100,000 years old. Some of the eroded tablets have been restored by modern CT scanning technology, and have revealed evidence of a lost Caspian culture called the Coreans in which Izal ministered, where Corean science, arts and religion could have influenced the Mesopotamian civilization.
CURRENT ISSUE
Member Since May 1922 Explore Discover Find Catalog Publish Reward
LONDON-ROME-BERLIN-MOSCOW-NAPLES
CERTIFIED CERTIFIED
Recent Articles
Proud Sponsor of Bourne’s Journal
Sponsored Works
News of the World
Oldest prophet in the Caspian Sea area is examined in Nurubi Fragments Eemian Tablets said by London Museum may be over 100,000 years old
related posts
SHARE ON:
SHARE ON:
© bOURNE uNIVERSITY 2021

GEORGIAN RUINS DISCOVERED MAY BE

MENTIONED IN THE KAREMLASH TABLETS

Archaeologists believe ruins may be more evidence of a Caspian Sea civilization Dara recorded in Karemlash Tablets found near Tel Barbara and Tel Ghanim, Iraq Karemlash records from same period as Nurubi Fragments, some 130,000 years ago The Eemian Prophet Izal recorded to have preached at the Dara City Ruins of what archaeologists believe to be the Corean city of Dara, mentioned in the ancient Karemlash Tablets. The city was recorded to have lived before the Ice Age and was destroyed in a cataclysm. The same location is also mentioned in the Nurubi Fragments, also old tablets. Tbilisi, Georgia - The remains of a Eemian ruined city was recently discovered by a team of archaeologists from the Georgian Batumi State University of Adjara while exploring recently unearthed relics near the city of Gori. As reported by the Daily World News Wire, the scientists believe that they may have uncovered more evidence of an ancient Caspian civilization that was reported on last year. The Karemlash Tablets, revealed in the 7th Century archaeological digs of Tel Barbara and Tel Ghanim by Englishman Austen Henry Layard in the 19th century, mentions Dara in connection with the ministry of the Caspian prophet Izal. Dara, or the "City of the Gray Towers” is seen by many as a fictional geographical location or a city, while feel the reference is to an actual city-state. There are also several postulations within the scientific and historical societies that the real city was location ranging from Gori to Kaspi in the northwest region of Tiblisi. The Karemlash Tablets were discovered shortly after the Nurubi Fragments were unearthed near Nineveh by Layard during the same year. Written in the same Akkadian, scholars consider the tablets part of the same record and may have even been part of a vaster collection that has yet to be completed. Several cities and historical persons, such as Izal and King Bartok, are mentioned in both records and events take place during the same Eemian period. Field technicians working on the Dara site searching for corroborating coins, tools, jewelry or any Corean artifacts in the ancient ruins. (Insert) One of the Karemlash Tablets stone records. Some scholars also believe the after the collapse of the Caspian Sea civilization before the last Ice Age, the surviving peoples over centuries migrated to the Tigris River in Mesopotamia, where with their writing, art, building and religious way of life birthed those first, ancient 4th Millennium BC kingdoms like Sumer and Ur. Professor Giuli Sanadze of the Archaeological Sciences of Ancient Georgia, of Batumi State University stated during an interview that “The speculations surrounding the existence and eventual destruction of the Darian city vary amongst historians, folklore and even in religion.” Professor Haran Tephnadze of the Senaki Center of Archaeology during his interview shared a quote from the Karemlash Tablets, third chapter (Vol Hom, scribe), verse 32 to 39: "32: How do you flock to the whims of Ashra against the First Gods? 33: Dara - your proud city of gray towers, 34: Who arose with gold and fine things above your neighbors, Thal, Zan and Gara? 35: Then (against) our prophet Izal, brought down the stones of Our (First Gods) temple? 36: And (with) the pits of King Bartok? 37: (Of which) you sought to overthrow the lands of the Children (of Yidath) 38: And take spoil of metals, jewels and cattle. 39: Such speaketh the First Gods (through Izal) of our prophet, and bring down the walls of Dara," he recited. He went on to state that, “In 1868, Jebidiah Smith wrote in the "A Commentary on the Book of Gates" of the legendary Paleothilic civilization called the Coreans, which ranged the ancient Caspian Sea Basin region some 130,000 years ago. The Prophet Izal, he stated, ministered during this period. He wrote the city had been destroyed by a natural disaster or as a punishment by the First Gods.” Professor Tephnadze was quick to mention that, "Religious scholars can argue about allegorical interpretations. The Karemlash Tablets' maps from the Eemian period certainly show the geography of these city-states. The record bearer was precise in the locations of the city and names the same characters from the Nurubi Fragments, but these maps are in finer detail. There is no doubt with the emerging sites of Paleothilic ruins that the Caspian societies we call the Coreans did indeed emerge from primitive tribal rule into a grand, yet short, building civilization. Proof enough that the story of Cor is not a legend, but historical evidences of peoples, cities and writing." Like the Nurubi fragments, the Karemlash Tablets were written in Akkadian. Scholars believe the similar writing style may have originated in the Caspian Sea and was brought to Mesopotamia when the ancient peoples migrated to the Tigris, birthing 4th Millennium BC Sumer . (Above) A royal seal inscription on one of the building base foundations, for protection against enemies. By 2019, after more excavations and archaeological research was and is being conducted, a note to the Georgian Ministry of Antiquities, reported while field studies were being conducted in Gori, stated that: "If the text of the end of Corean Dara can be historically accepted, then there is no doubt of the destruction of the city by stones? The walls, temples and palaces had been pounded in some 'divine' hail, not unlike like Sodom, and the city state collapsed through crevasses into the ground. While the approaching Ice Age would have begun to deposit glacial barriers over the Caspian Basin, severe hail storms are not unheard of, and large storms have been known." The collapse of the Caspian civilization, according to the Nurubi Fragments. was caused by the Corean society being fragmented by political wars and agricultural decline, which in part was center to their religious beliefs. As the nations declined, mass migrations occurred to other parts of the Middle East and Upper East, searching for food and shelter. The Ice Age came and destroyed most of the abandoned cities with crushing sheets of glaciers, which, when retreated due to global warming, were mostly stone rubble and timbers. Excavations and research are currently being conducted on the Darian ruins and the Georgian Ministry of Antiquities has placed the site off limits to non government and university personnel. Archaeologists are hoping to use the chiseled maps in the Karemlash Tablets as an field guide to determine if more Caspian cities can be unearthed, or it the current find is random coincidence. There findings will be published in 2024.
THE BOURNE JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGY
BOURNE UNIVERSITY

WHAT WE KNOW ABOUT THE EEMIAN STONE

TABLETS

The Nurubi Fragments, unearthed in the excavated Nineveh mound of Kouyunjik, were discovered by English archaeologist Austen Henry Layard in 1852, where they were gathered with some 22,000 cuneiform tablets from the famous library of Ashurbanipal and shipped to the British Museum. The collection consist of some twenty four clay cuneiform tablets that describe the ministry of an ancient prophet named Izal in the Caspian Sea region and the Book of Gates that occurred some 100,000 years ago during the Eemian period. The tablets were recently discovered by records curators of the Special Middle Eastern Collection with several hundred other records in special curation vaults. The British Museum's Principal Curator has scheduled a special engagement with the Council for British Archaeology next year and have indicated the tablets could challenge the accepted theories of human civilization as they are known today. The tablets are written the Semitic characters of Akkadian, a language that was developed in the ancient Sumer around the 30th Century BC, but have carbon 14 dated some 100,000 years old. Some of the eroded tablets have been restored by modern CT scanning technology, and have revealed evidence of a lost Caspian culture called the Coreans in which Izal ministered, where Corean science, arts and religion could have influenced the Mesopotamian civilization.
Oldest prophet in the Caspian Sea area is examined in Nurubi Fragments Eemian Tablets said by London Museum may be over 100,000 years old
related posts
SHARE ON:
SHARE ON:
Recent Articles
Sponsored Works
Proud Sponsor of Bourne’s Journal
© bOURNE uNIVERSITY 2021

GEORGIAN RUINS

DISCOVERED MAY BE

MENTIONED IN THE

KAREMLASH TABLETS

Archaeologists believe ruins may be more evidence of a Caspian Sea civilization Dara recorded in Karemlash Tablets found near Tel Barbara and Tel Ghanim, Iraq Karemlash records from same period as Nurubi Fragments, some 130,000 years ago The Eemian Prophet Izal recorded to have preached at the Dara City Ruins of what archaeologists believe to be the Corean city of Dara, mentioned in the ancient Karemlash Tablets. The city was recorded to have lived before the Ice Age and was destroyed in a cataclysm. The same location is also mentioned in the Nurubi Fragments, also old tablets. Tbilisi, Georgia - The remains of a Eemian ruined city was recently discovered by a team of archaeologists from the Georgian Batumi State University of Adjara while exploring recently unearthed relics near the city of Gori. As reported by the Daily World News Wire, the scientists believe that they may have uncovered more evidence of an ancient Caspian civilization that was reported on last year. The Karemlash Tablets, revealed in the 7th Century archaeological digs of Tel Barbara and Tel Ghanim by Englishman Austen Henry Layard in the 19th century, mentions Dara in connection with the ministry of the Caspian prophet Izal. Dara, or the "City of the Gray Towers” is seen by many as a fictional geographical location or a city, while feel the reference is to an actual city-state. There are also several postulations within the scientific and historical societies that the real city was location ranging from Gori to Kaspi in the northwest region of Tiblisi. The Karemlash Tablets were discovered shortly after the Nurubi Fragments were unearthed near Nineveh by Layard during the same year. Written in the same Akkadian, scholars consider the tablets part of the same record and may have even been part of a vaster collection that has yet to be completed. Several cities and historical persons, such as Izal and King Bartok, are mentioned in both records and events take place during the same Eemian period. Field technicians working on the Dara site searching for corroborating coins, tools, jewelry or any Corean artifacts in the ancient ruins. (Insert) One of the Karemlash Tablets stone records. Some scholars also believe the after the collapse of the Caspian Sea civilization before the last Ice Age, the surviving peoples over centuries migrated to the Tigris River in Mesopotamia, where with their writing, art, building and religious way of life birthed those first, ancient 4th Millennium BC kingdoms like Sumer and Ur. Professor Giuli Sanadze of the Archaeological Sciences of Ancient Georgia, of Batumi State University stated during an interview that “The speculations surrounding the existence and eventual destruction of the Darian city vary amongst historians, folklore and even in religion.” Professor Haran Tephnadze of the Senaki Center of Archaeology during his interview shared a quote from the Karemlash Tablets, third chapter (Vol Hom, scribe), verse 32 to 39: "32: How do you flock to the whims of Ashra against the First Gods? 33: Dara - your proud city of gray towers, 34: Who arose with gold and fine things above your neighbors, Thal, Zan and Gara? 35: Then (against) our prophet Izal, brought down the stones of Our (First Gods) temple? 36: And (with) the pits of King Bartok? 37: (Of which) you sought to overthrow the lands of the Children (of Yidath) 38: And take spoil of metals, jewels and cattle. 39: Such speaketh the First Gods (through Izal) of our prophet, and bring down the walls of Dara," he recited. He went on to state that, “In 1868, Jebidiah Smith wrote in the "A Commentary on the Book of Gates" of the legendary Paleothilic civilization called the Coreans, which ranged the ancient Caspian Sea Basin region some 130,000 years ago. The Prophet Izal, he stated, ministered during this period. He wrote the city had been destroyed by a natural disaster or as a punishment by the First Gods.” Professor Tephnadze was quick to mention that, "Religious scholars can argue about allegorical interpretations. The Karemlash Tablets' maps from the Eemian period certainly show the geography of these city-states. The record bearer was precise in the locations of the city and names the same characters from the Nurubi Fragments, but these maps are in finer detail. There is no doubt with the emerging sites of Paleothilic ruins that the Caspian societies we call the Coreans did indeed emerge from primitive tribal rule into a grand, yet short, building civilization. Proof enough that the story of Cor is not a legend, but historical evidences of peoples, cities and writing." Like the Nurubi fragments, the Karemlash Tablets were written in Akkadian. Scholars believe the similar writing style may have originated in the Caspian Sea and was brought to Mesopotamia when the ancient peoples migrated to the Tigris, birthing 4th Millennium BC Sumer . (Above) A royal seal inscription on one of the building base foundations, for protection against enemies. By 2019, after more excavations and archaeological research was and is being conducted, a note to the Georgian Ministry of Antiquities, reported while field studies were being conducted in Gori, stated that: "If the text of the end of Corean Dara can be historically accepted, then there is no doubt of the destruction of the city by stones? The walls, temples and palaces had been pounded in some 'divine' hail, not unlike like Sodom, and the city state collapsed through crevasses into the ground. While the approaching Ice Age would have begun to deposit glacial barriers over the Caspian Basin, severe hail storms are not unheard of, and large storms have been known." The collapse of the Caspian civilization, according to the Nurubi Fragments. was caused by the Corean society being fragmented by political wars and agricultural decline, which in part was center to their religious beliefs. As the nations declined, mass migrations occurred to other parts of the Middle East and Upper East, searching for food and shelter. The Ice Age came and destroyed most of the abandoned cities with crushing sheets of glaciers, which, when retreated due to global warming, were mostly stone rubble and timbers. Excavations and research are currently being conducted on the Darian ruins and the Georgian Ministry of Antiquities has placed the site off limits to non government and university personnel. Archaeologists are hoping to use the chiseled maps in the Karemlash Tablets as an field guide to determine if more Caspian cities can be unearthed, or it the current find is random coincidence. There findings will be published in 2024.

WHAT WE KNOW ABOUT THE

EEMIAN STONE TABLETS

The Nurubi Fragments, unearthed in the excavated Nineveh mound of Kouyunjik, were discovered by English archaeologist Austen Henry Layard in 1852, where they were gathered with some 22,000 cuneiform tablets from the famous library of Ashurbanipal and shipped to the British Museum. The collection consist of some twenty four clay cuneiform tablets that describe the ministry of an ancient prophet named Izal in the Caspian Sea region and the Book of Gates that occurred some 100,000 years ago during the Eemian period. The tablets were recently discovered by records curators of the Special Middle Eastern Collection with several hundred other records in special curation vaults. The British Museum's Principal Curator has scheduled a special engagement with the Council for British Archaeology next year and have indicated the tablets could challenge the accepted theories of human civilization as they are known today. The tablets are written the Semitic characters of Akkadian, a language that was developed in the ancient Sumer around the 30th Century BC, but have carbon 14 dated some 100,000 years old. Some of the eroded tablets have been restored by modern CT scanning technology, and have revealed evidence of a lost Caspian culture called the Coreans in which Izal ministered, where Corean science, arts and religion could have influenced the Mesopotamian civilization.
BOURNE UNIVERSITY
THE BOURNE JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGY
SHARE ON:
SHARE ON:
Member Since May 1922 Explore Discover Find Catalog Publish Reward
LONDON-ROME-BERLIN-MOSCOW-NAPLES
CERTIFIED CERTIFIED
Proud Sponsor of Bourne’s Journal
Like our Sponser