You know, I'm fairly sure the move was based in Egypt and eastern Africa. Babylon would have been non-existant at that time, and the region would have been deep within arabia, too far for anyone to reach.
@Arabman666 Thats technically not true. The only claim egyptians have that egypt is older than babylon are the sphinx and the dating due to it's rain erosion, but that's just a theory with no proof other wise. Nimrod was the founder and king of the first empire to come into existence after the Flood, it is from his kingdom Babylon that Egypt got most of it gods and religious beliefs. Unless you're egyptian yourself and then that means egypt is the greatest gift to mankind no matter what we say.
I'm fairly sure by the time Jacob (grandson of Abraham) traveled to Egypt, a Pharaoh dynasty had come and gone- and a Kingship was established in Egypt. For there to have been Pharaohs long before Jacob (which means before the 2 generations back to Abraham) means that Egypt predated the "Latest" incarnation of Babylon (as Nimrods empire is from Abraham's era- perhaps Ebers upon traveling their from modern Oman)
Some base points here: While I understand you may believe that the Bible is the unchanged word of God, I don't. The world isn't 6 thousand years old, and while Babylon was the helm of Evil/Civilized evil, it wasn't the start of it all. The Flood in my belief was local- thus it wasn't a "Restart" button God pushed in which everyone died. It was also far removed from Nimrod's Babylon.
I'm not Egyptian. I'm Levite. In appearance, Egypt's Empires were older than Babylon as we know it.
@Arabman666 Your first point is true only if you assume that nothing existed before abraham's time in terms of civilization in modern day iraq. I don't know where you came up with the assumption I believe the bible is the unchanged word of God. I'm not christian. Mentioning Nimrod doesn't mean i'm getting this from the bible. There was a history before christianity. I don't know where you get that babylon was the helm of evil civilization either, since Abraham came from there.
I was speaking from a Biblical perspective because you brought up the flood. Typically, Muslims, Jews and Christians believe in the Flood. However, Muslims are the only ones that believe in a local flood.
I didn't say that Nirmrod's civilization was the first in Iraq: I said it was the first "Babylon" as we know it. Before that hit the scene, it appears as though the Scorpion King established a Kingdom in Egypt with no relation to any Iraqi-culture.
Respond to this video... I don't think the Great Flood was far removed at all from babylon. It's mentioned in Gilgamesh, the world's first recorded epic, once again from the same area. Also, egypt isn't part of what's known as the fertile crescent, where civilization was most likely to have begun.
Civilization is mistakenly popularly believe to have begun in the fertile crescent. It is more likely, and logical, that it began in Felix Arabia. (Modern day Yemen and Western Saudia.) It is well known that the Phoenicians broke off the South Arabians, and provided a modified South Arabian alphabet to the west (which is why they are often referred to as the origin of the alphabet)
Either way, I see civilization starting south, traveling to the crescent, then hitting east and west
OMG THIS VID IS AWESOME!
FlyingWolfWings 8 months ago
what's the name of this song? It's beautiful
jinxcat90 2 years ago
@jinxcat90
爱在西元前 (A love before AD)By Taiwanese Pop star Jay Chou
chiasp0609 1 year ago
You know, I'm fairly sure the move was based in Egypt and eastern Africa. Babylon would have been non-existant at that time, and the region would have been deep within arabia, too far for anyone to reach.
Arabman666 2 years ago
@Arabman666 Thats technically not true. The only claim egyptians have that egypt is older than babylon are the sphinx and the dating due to it's rain erosion, but that's just a theory with no proof other wise. Nimrod was the founder and king of the first empire to come into existence after the Flood, it is from his kingdom Babylon that Egypt got most of it gods and religious beliefs. Unless you're egyptian yourself and then that means egypt is the greatest gift to mankind no matter what we say.
Taboowriter 9 months ago
@Taboowriter
I'm fairly sure by the time Jacob (grandson of Abraham) traveled to Egypt, a Pharaoh dynasty had come and gone- and a Kingship was established in Egypt. For there to have been Pharaohs long before Jacob (which means before the 2 generations back to Abraham) means that Egypt predated the "Latest" incarnation of Babylon (as Nimrods empire is from Abraham's era- perhaps Ebers upon traveling their from modern Oman)
Arabman666 9 months ago
@Taboowriter
Some base points here: While I understand you may believe that the Bible is the unchanged word of God, I don't. The world isn't 6 thousand years old, and while Babylon was the helm of Evil/Civilized evil, it wasn't the start of it all. The Flood in my belief was local- thus it wasn't a "Restart" button God pushed in which everyone died. It was also far removed from Nimrod's Babylon.
I'm not Egyptian. I'm Levite. In appearance, Egypt's Empires were older than Babylon as we know it.
Arabman666 9 months ago
@Arabman666 Your first point is true only if you assume that nothing existed before abraham's time in terms of civilization in modern day iraq. I don't know where you came up with the assumption I believe the bible is the unchanged word of God. I'm not christian. Mentioning Nimrod doesn't mean i'm getting this from the bible. There was a history before christianity. I don't know where you get that babylon was the helm of evil civilization either, since Abraham came from there.
Taboowriter 9 months ago
@Taboowriter
I was speaking from a Biblical perspective because you brought up the flood. Typically, Muslims, Jews and Christians believe in the Flood. However, Muslims are the only ones that believe in a local flood.
I didn't say that Nirmrod's civilization was the first in Iraq: I said it was the first "Babylon" as we know it. Before that hit the scene, it appears as though the Scorpion King established a Kingdom in Egypt with no relation to any Iraqi-culture.
Arabman666 9 months ago
Respond to this video... I don't think the Great Flood was far removed at all from babylon. It's mentioned in Gilgamesh, the world's first recorded epic, once again from the same area. Also, egypt isn't part of what's known as the fertile crescent, where civilization was most likely to have begun.
Taboowriter 9 months ago
@Taboowriter
Civilization is mistakenly popularly believe to have begun in the fertile crescent. It is more likely, and logical, that it began in Felix Arabia. (Modern day Yemen and Western Saudia.) It is well known that the Phoenicians broke off the South Arabians, and provided a modified South Arabian alphabet to the west (which is why they are often referred to as the origin of the alphabet)
Either way, I see civilization starting south, traveling to the crescent, then hitting east and west
Arabman666 9 months ago
please,name de singer??
jateles 2 years ago
A Chinese singer named Jay Chou from Taiwan.
tousan23 2 years ago 2
@tousan23
you mean Taiwanese? not chinese
BenHughesStudios 1 year ago
@BenHughesStudios
台湾华人歌手or台湾华语歌手
in terms of ethnic and language
Taiwan's official name is Republic of China,
any problems?
tousan23 1 year ago
@tousan23
yes.
BenHughesStudios 1 year ago
nice video!i like steven strait!he is sexy!hope u can make more video!nice try and good job!
bluewhale2 2 years ago