Are the Annunaki of the Hopi and Sumarians one in the same as the Watchers of Enoch?

in annunaki •  6 years ago 

An interesting note is that the Hopi word for ant is "anu". The word for friends is "naki".
https://www.trueghosttales.com/ant-people-hopi-annunaki.php

Enki’s solution: to create a primitive worker that will take over the back-breaking work of the Anunnaki. According to Enki the creature required who can perform some of the mining task is the Hominid that existed already in Africa at that time. All they have to do is to make the creature an intelligent worker by giving the “mark of the Anunnaki”
http://blog.world-mysteries.com/science/creation-of-mankind-a-sitchins-view/

The Annunaki (Anuna in original Sumerian text) gods were numerous. According to Sumerian text, they numbered 600 in population. It was written that 300 were given reign over the heavens (everything outside of Earth) and 300 were sent down to reign over Earth. The term “god” is the widely accepted translation of the Sumerian word used to describe the ruling authority or royal bloodline of these beings. This is an important detail to keep in mind as these writings are explored. Our contemporary use of the word “god” often brings religious dogmas and secular division with it. Many monotheistic religions of the twenty-first century will instantly reject any use of the term “god” that describes anyone or anything other than the one true God of the Christian Bible and Hebrew Torah.
https://www.theancientaliens.com/gods-of-sumeria

According to the Book of Enoch, exactly 200 Watchers fell to Earth to take human wives. It names 20 of these, explaining that each one was a leader in a group of 10.
http://echoes.devin.com/watchers/names.html

In the Books of Enoch, the first Book of Enoch devotes much of its attention to the fall of the watchers. The Second Book of Enoch addresses the watchers (Gk. egrḗgoroi) who are in fifth heaven where the fall took place. The Third Book of Enoch gives attention to the unfallen watchers.[9]

The use of the term "watchers" is common in the Book of Enoch. The Book of the Watchers (1 Enoch 6–36) occurs in the Aramaic fragments with the phrase irin we-qadishin, "Watchers and Holy Ones", a reference to Aramaic Daniel.[10] The Aramaic irin "watchers" is rendered as "angel" (Greek angelos, Coptic malah) in the Greek and Ethiopian translations, although the usual Aramaic term for angel malakha does not occur in Aramaic Enoch.[11]

Some have attempted to date this section of 1 Enoch is around 2nd–1st century BC and they believe this book is based on one interpretation of the Sons of God passage in Genesis 6, according to which angels married with human females, giving rise to a race of hybrids known as the Nephilim. The term irin is primarily applied to disobedient watchers who numbered a total of 200, and of whom their leaders are named, but equally Aramaic iri ("watcher" singular) is also applied to the obedient archangels who chain them, such as Raphael (1 Enoch 22:6).

Book of Enoch
Further information: Fallen angel
In the Book of Enoch, the watchers (Aramaic עִירִין, iyrin) are angels dispatched to Earth to watch over the humans. They soon begin to lust for human women and, at the prodding of their leader Samyaza, defect en masse to illicitly instruct humanity and procreate among them. The offspring of these unions are the Nephilim, savage giants who pillage the earth and endanger humanity.

Samyaza and his associates further taught their human charges arts and technologies such as weaponry, cosmetics, mirrors, sorcery, and other techniques that would otherwise be discovered gradually over time by humans, not foisted upon them all at once. Eventually God allows a Great Flood to rid the earth of the Nephilim, but first sends Uriel to warn Noah so as not to eradicate the human race. The watchers are bound "in the valleys of the Earth" until Judgment Day (Jude verse 6 says that these fallen angels are kept "in everlasting chains under darkness" until Judgement Day).

The chiefs of tens, listed in the Book of Enoch, are as follows:

  1. And these are the names of their leaders: Sêmîazâz, their leader, Arâkîba, Râmêêl, Kôkabîêl, Tâmîêl, Râmîêl, Dânêl, Êzêqêêl, Barâqîjâl, Asâêl, Armârôs, Batârêl, Anânêl, Zaqîêl, Samsâpêêl, Satarêl, Tûrêl, Jômjâêl, Sariêl. 8. These are their chiefs of tens.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Watcher_(angel)#Books_of_Enoch
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To the question in your title, my Magic 8-Ball says:

Signs point to yes

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