ADAM / THOR / INDRA, EVE AND APPLE

7. Adam / Thor / Indra, Eve and Apple :

 

The story of Adam, Eve and Apple as stated in religious scriptures is not as what it is told. Lieutenant Colonel Laurence Austine Waddell after his thorough research has found the truth and what he has written in book I am writing it here.

 

From the Book The British Edda 1930 Part 2 :

 

The Marriage Ceremony of King Adam and Eve :

 

In the marriage ceremony, as pictured in this archaic sculpture, Eve as well as Adam is attended by a Goat, the symbol of the Goths and it wears a peaked cap, the so-called "Unicorn" of later and British heraldry, as opposed to the Lion or Leopard cult-animal of the Edenites. This shows that Eve is now admitted into the Gothic fraternity. The two (Adam and Eve) are seen exchanging a cross-like emblem, which is surmounted by a globe, which I have shown to be a Rowan Apple of Ygg's Drasill Tree of Knowledge, and emblematic of the Red Sun-Cross of St George, and somewhat like a "Celtic Cross" and Adam's Gothic woodcross was made of this Ash-tree.

 

This Rowan Apple is now seen to have been the source of the perverted Jewish legend of Eve tempting Adam with the Apple, which was to the Edenites under the Matriarch El of Hell, "The Forbidden Fruit" as it symbolized Adam's rival cult of the Sun and God and Heaven. And Abel, as Baldr or Loki, bearing the double axe, which in Sumerian has the name of Bal, is thus clearly identified, and confirmed by that name being defined as "The hostile lord Lukh," i.e. Loki.

 

Eve's asseveration that she "worshipped" Adam Thor is interesting with reference to the occurrence of that expression in the modern marriage service and later on we find that Adam's mother also "worshipped" his father.

The account of the marriage is thus described in the "Prose Edda".

 

In the Northern region he (Thor) found that priestess sibyl [Cybele], Whom we call Sif, and married her.

 

FIG. 58 : Marriage of King Adam -Thor and Eve with Wedding Procession. From rock-sculptures at Iasili near Pteda of about (?) 3000 B.C. (After Perrot and Guillaume, P.A. pI. 49)

Note : Adam in Gothic garb carrying his mace, borne shoulder high by his men and attended by his royal Unicorn Goat, meets Eve, who is also given the Unicorn as his betrothed queen, and both bear an apple -like symbol. Eve is followed by the Edenite Baldr or Abel both mounted on cat-like lions or leopards. Loki, Bal, Bul, or Baldr bears a double axe, which in Sumerian is Bal, with the definition. "The hostile lord Lockh", i.e., Loki. Behind him are the Eden weirds, mounted on a two-headed vulture. The retinue of Adam or Her-T'hor, carved, like himself, nearly life-size on the side of the rock sanctuary, are here omitted for want of space.

None can tell the genealogy of Sif.


She was the fairest of women. Her hair was like gold.

 

[The marriage also appears to be referred to in a stanza in the Hound's Lay Edda, which, though wrongly making Freya "daughter" of Ymi or Gymi and Wodan , says:]

 

Frey wedded Gerdi, she (Frey) was Gymi's daughter And (of) Auc Bodo (Wodan), an Edenite in airt.

 

[Here Geedi is apparently familiar for "Geir" or "George" as "Geordie, "that is King Thor of Cappadocia. For the versions of the marriage of King Adam -Thor and Eve in Sumerian, Indian and Greek traditional records and as compared with Genesis, see Appendix I. pp. 229 f.]

 

Eve imparts King Adam's Ten Commandments to Gunn, Cain or Gawain :

Eve as Priestess of Adam's Rowan-Apple Solar cult [We have seen that Eve, the chief vestal priestess of Eden, on forsaking Eden with its demonist Serpent religion of Hell to marry Adam in Cappadocia was taunted by the Matriarch El or Heide with being a proselytized "Heide of the Rowan (Apple)" that is a priestess of Adam-Thor's rival and infinitely superior Solar religion of Heaven.

We then find Eve, after her marriage with Adam, is formally installed by the latter as "Heide of the Rowan Apple" the Aida priestess of the Sumerians to the Goths in Adam's capital in Vidara :]

Heide (Eve) of the Rowan Runes is hight the she-goat (Goth)


That stands in the Aryan Father's hall,


And bites off the limes of the Wisdom-Tree,


And fills her shapely jar,


She scales out the Baptist's mead,


The wine that never wanes.


Eve as Iduna of the Life-Apples or Athene :

In this capacity as dispenser of the Life-giving apples to the Goths from their sacred tree, Eve is disclosed as the historical human original of Idun, the Lady of the Basket of Life-Apples of the later prose Edda. This title of Iduna, which she bears in several of the Eddas is derived as I have shown from her Sumerian priestess title of Adueni or Atueni, now disclosed as the Sumerian source of the Greek name and functions of Athene, the patron mother "goddess" of the Greeks, who, like Eve, was an Amazonian (see PI. XV). And we have seen that Eve succoured a wounded and distressed young knight, like Athene. Her name as Ifa or Ivi-Gunn (Guen-Ever) seems also to be the basis of the late Greek myth of Iphi-genia, the vestal nymph of the cruel mother "goddess" Artemis, who demanded human sacrifices; and Ifa, Ifo or Eve had been a vest al of the Eden cult.

 

Eve or Idun (Sumerian Adueni or Atueni) as Athene in Greek Art

(From vase-painting of fifth century B.C., by Andokides. in Berlin Museum). She is in her Valkyr or Amazonian form of Gunn Hilda or "The Warrioress Gunn or Gunn-Ifo" (Guen-Ever).

Note : The Swastika Sun-Crosses on her skirt, and her crested helmet of ancient Hittite type, as in Plate XX II I, and for Crosses see Plate XIII, pediment, and fig. 17A.

 

IG. 69 : Eve as Idun, "The Lady of the Life-Apples," offering King Adam a fruit. From Sumerian seal of about 2500 B.C. (After Ward, 387. X 2)

Note : Adam-Thor besides his club carries a plough and wears a lion-skin cloak and his Goat is in attendance. Eve wearing Gothic horned hat, and like her husband embowered in Wheat, offers him a fruit (Apple). On right is a second scene, in which Eve stands beside a vase of fruit (or "altar") and offers a fruit to a cherisher of the Goat (Goth) and behind, a Gothic woman stands with a vase spouting water. The inscription reads : "Ninianush the Scribe of the garden".