Summary of Mystery of the Sumerian Handbags SOLVED

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00:00:00 - 00:15:00

The video discusses the mystery of the Sumerian handbags and offers a possible explanation for their existence. The bags were likely used as a form of currency, and their origins can be traced back to the Sumerian culture. The video also discusses the theory that ancient Mesopotamian art, specifically images of the up kalo, may be referencing the pineal gland of the brain. However, the evidence presented is not sufficient to support the claim.

  • 00:00:00 In this video, Matt Simpson discusses the mystery of the Sumerian handbags, which are said to be a head-scratcher for researchers. Simpson confirms that the buckets are real and were made of metal, copper, bronze, silver, and gold. He also notes that the Assyrians never called the creatures depicted on palace reliefs as Anunnaki, but as the up Khalu.
  • 00:05:00 The mystery of the Sumerian handbags has been solved, according to this video. The bags were likely used as a form of currency, and their origins can be traced back to the Sumerian culture. There is no evidence of the up Khalu (or any other Asgardians) in Sumerian art, meaning the myth may have its roots in that region, but the earliest depictions of them come from a Syrian culture. The Assyrians are the ones who seem to have fully developed this mythology, and the Babylonians to a limited degree also have it.
  • 00:10:00 The mystery of the Sumerian handbags is solved by examining the symbols used in Neo-Assyrian palaces. These images typically depict the king as a spiritual being, and the objects represented in the reliefs include a date palm and a tree with religious meaning. Ceri ologist, Paul Parpola, has proposed that the tree in these reliefs represents the king, and that the gesture of the upkalo towards the tree is a gesture of protection. His theory has not been universally accepted, but it is an interesting perspective on the handbags.
  • 00:15:00 The video discusses the theory that ancient Mesopotamian art, specifically images of the up kalo, may be referencing the pineal gland of the brain. However, the evidence presented is not sufficient to support the claim. Additionally, the video also discuss the theory that ancient Mesopotamian schools may have taught initiates about the third eye. This idea is also not supported by the evidence presented.

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