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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bardiya

Smerdis 

 

I See You, Smerdis. I will show the World all of you. 27 September 2024. Today, I found this inscription in Wikipedia. 

 

Gaumata” being trampled upon by Darius the Great, Behistun inscription. The Old Persian inscription reads “This is Gaumâta, the Magian. He lied, saying “I am Smerdis, the son of Cyrus, I am king”.”[14]

 

He is a Magian and his religion was Zoroastrian. He is the True King. His name is Smerdis son of Cyrus. Darius is a LIAR.

Both “Assyria” and the contraction, “Syria,” are ultimately derived from the Akkadian Aššur.[21] Following the decline of the Neo-Assyrian Empire, the subsequent empires that held dominion over the Assyrian lands adopted distinct appellations for the region, with a significant portion of these names also being rooted in Aššur. The Achaemenid Empire referred to Assyria as Aθūrā (“Athura”)

 

Athura = Athena

Athura = Wisdom

 

Athena = Wisdom

Athena is Ashura (Woman)

 

Anna’s Closing Thoughts on this: 

You don’t lose everything and die to make one last effort to leave one last message to the world “Darius Lied, I am Gaumâta, the Magian.” unless it’s Truth. 

 

Liars don’t do this.

The prince’s name is listed variously in the historical sources. In Darius the Great‘s Behistun inscription, his Persian name is Bardiya or Bardia. Herodotus calls him Smerdis, which is the prevalent Greek form of his name; the Persian name has been assimilated to the Greek (Asiatic) name Smerdis or Smerdies, a name which also occurs in the poems of Alcaeus and Anacreon. Bardiya is called Tanyoxarces by Ctesias, who also names Gaumāta as Sphendadates;[5] he is called Tanooxares by Xenophon, who takes the name from Ctesias,[6] and he is called Mergis and Merdis by Justin[7] and Merdis by Aeschylus.[8]

In English-language histories he has traditionally been called Smerdis, following Herodotus’ example, but recent histories tend to call him Bardiya.[9][10]

“Is Gaumâta, the Magian the Pierced Prince? (See The War of The Messiah Scroll)