Sumerian Handbag of the Gods Found in Mesopotamia — What’s Inside Has Been Hidden for 3,000 Years [VIDEO]

In the ruins of ancient Nimrud, carved into Neo-Assyrian palace walls nearly 3,000 years ago, supernatural beings called Apkallu hold mysterious rectangular objects with curved handles. Mainstream archaeology calls them ritual buckets for sacred liquid. But the same object appears at Göbekli Tepe in Turkey — dated to 9600 BC. At Olmec sites in Mexico. In Maori carvings. In Hittite reliefs. Always the same shape. Always held by supernatural figures. Always associated with the transmission of knowledge to humanity. The pattern spans 9,000 years and multiple continents. Coincidence cannot explain the consistency. Something was being depicted. Nobody agrees on what.

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