Publisher's Synopsis
The Gundestrup Caldron is a Celtic artifact discovered in the Teutonic land of Denmark in the early 1890s. It is housed in the Danish National Museum at Copenhagen. It contains no script but consists entirely of pictorial imagery. The primary reason for identifying it with the early postdiluvian family of Noah lies in its seven exterior panels, which furnish a counterpart to the diluvian family as represented by the Egyptian Ogdoad of Hermopolis and other such traditions. This interpretation implies the existence of a prototype or prototypes on which the present artifact is modeled.ContentsFORWARDPEFACEINTRODUCTION: by Ross S Marshall Chapter -1 A Designed World Chapter -2 Text of Genesis 10 Chapter -3 Text of the Sumerian King List Chapter -4 Panels of the Gundestrup Caldron Chapter -5Identifications of the Noachic Elite Chapter -6Noah's Family Before 2368 Chapter -7 Colonization of Mesopotamia 2368-38 Chapter- 8 The First Kish Order 2338-2308 Chapter -9 The Eanna Period and Uruk-Aratta War 2308-2278 Chapter -10 The Dynasty III Period 2278-2248 Chapter-11 The Akkadian Empire 2248-2188 Chapter-12 Distant Colonizations