Message from @BlindedByNutech
Discord ID: 769458588007137290
lmao
swords maybe or is that after spears
they didn't have metalworks since we know Tubal-Cain one of the final generation descendants of Cain learned the artifice of metal, namely brass if i rememebr off top of my head
like i said, i would assume a spear was first
aye
but you dont need metal to make a spear either tho
you can take a stick and grind it on stone to a point
could have been many types of things really
i think soemtiems a sword or blade of some sort
the sword is the material symbol of the tongue
never mind
crap man
lol
just never mind
lol
but i also am a nerd and like my sword lore
there’s stone swords in Minecraft
spears isn't a bad guess though i'd say
because they also could have had stone or wooden spears before metal ones, thus easy to see how they have the concept
msot all ancient civilizations utilize the spear
the blatt link from zelda lol
though the Greeks popularized it moreso
the sword really is a big one
the bow and arrow also
assumably Nimrod being a mighty hunter before the Lord implies he may have been an archer, which would imply early civilization have archers
indeed his rival Asshur and his civilization depict the chariot and archer frequently
and they are just as old as Nimrod
poor Asshur he always gets forgotten about, but this motehr fucker built Nineveh ffs
I just thought of this, what about traces of Neanderthal dna in us
Nineveh is such a legendary city is so many ancient cultures and it's famous destruction prophesied in the Bible was so in line with the prophecy of it's compelte obliteration that it was thought to be a myth for thousands of years, pretty much the whole pperiod of AD
If we were only humans
until very very recently when we getting access to the area found it and confirmed it and its destruction and found the library of Ashurbanipal
<:tarbaby:476173030117212163>
Why lol
Judaic interpreters as early as Philo and Yochanan ben Zakai (1st century AD) interpreted "a mighty hunter before the Lord" (Heb.: גבר ציד לפני יהוה, ḡibbōr-ṣayiḏ lip̄nê Yahweh, lit. "in the face of Yahweh") as signifying "in opposition to the Lord"; a similar interpretation is found in Pseudo-Philo, as well as later in Symmachus. Some rabbinic commentators have also connected the name Nimrod with a Hebrew word meaning 'rebel'. In Pseudo-Philo (dated c. AD 70), Nimrod is made leader of the Hamites, while Joktan as leader of the Semites, and Fenech as leader of the Japhethites, are also associated with the building of the Tower.[8] Versions of this story are again picked up in later works such as Apocalypse of Pseudo-Methodius (7th century AD).
lol according to some heretics from way later
Genesis says that the "beginning of his kingdom" (reshit mamlakhto) were the towns of "Babel, Erech, Akkad and Calneh in the land of Shinar" (Mesopotamia) (Gen 10:10)—understood variously to imply that he either founded these cities, ruled over them, or both. Owing to an ambiguity in the original Hebrew text, it is unclear whether it is he or Ashur who additionally built Nineveh, Resen, Rehoboth-Ir and Calah (both interpretations are reflected in various English versions). Sir Walter Raleigh devoted several pages in his History of the World (c. 1616) to reciting past scholarship regarding the question of whether it had been Nimrod or Ashur who built the cities in Assyria.[4]
Nimrod theory so popular, poor Asshur he gets totally fogotten about, but he is also an ancientmost post-flood found of civilziation and the earliest cities
and really an empire that though they didn't conquer the whole world, they were the first superpower