Mesopotamian Theogony Audiobook By Ricardo A. Arbeláez Altamirano cover art

Mesopotamian Theogony

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Mesopotamian Theogony

By: Ricardo A. Arbeláez Altamirano
Narrated by: Virtual Voice
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Before the law ruled over mankind and before silence covered the temples, the gods walked upon the land of clay and blood. Along the banks of the Tigris and the Euphrates was born a vision of the world in which order had to be imposed, chaos restrained, and justice feared, so that civilization might survive.

This work reconstructs Mesopotamian theogony as a continuous and epic narrative, inspired by Sumerian and Akkadian tablets, the Epic of Gilgamesh, the ancient hymns, and the great creation myths. Anu, Enlil, Enki, Inanna, Marduk, and Shamash emerge here with form, will, and purpose, weaving their destinies with that of a fragile humanity—limited, yet aware of its end.

Through divine wars, pacts, punishments, and revelations, the reader witnesses the birth of the cosmos, the establishment of power, the flood, the fall of the hero, and the gradual withdrawal of the gods. When the divine voice fades, the law takes its place. The Code of Hammurabi appears in full as a sacred text dictated by the Sun God, bringing the myth to its culmination with stone, punishment, and order as the pillars of human survival.

More than a mythological compendium, this book is a solemn narrative about the origin of civilization, the price of order, and the legacy the gods left to mankind. A work that unites history, myth, and philosophy into a single narrative body, intended for those who seek to understand how fear, justice, and memory sustained the world when the gods fell silent.
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