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Climate Change Nubio-Kemetic Akkad and Sumer Birthed The Scorpion King!

The true story of the Scorpion King despite the Hollywood film version in actuality takes place in the Bronze age! Central African Religions are continuations of African Traditional Religions where Gods represent aspects of Nature and Humanity. Climate Change Was The catalyst that birthed High Culture of the Levant and the Roots of Christianity that started in Ancient Kemet called Egypt!


Was the Scorpion King an Explorer from the predynastic period of ancient Kemet? The Akkadian Empire was the first known ancient empire of Mesopotamia, succeeding the long-lived civilization of Sumer. Did the Scorpion King colonize what would become China?

Dwayne Johnson's film "The Scorpion King" was inspired by an actual Egyptian ruler known as King Scorpion, who governed before the era of the Pharaohs. A recent study by a Chinese researcher suggests a possible connection between this ancient ruler and China, relating to the first dynasties that may have originated from the early predynastic period of Kemet, known as Egypt by the Greeks, which translates to 'Land of the Black People' or 'those with burnt (Black) faces.' The study posits that Egypt's Scorpion King and China's Yellow Emperor might have been the same Afro Asiatic Akkadian Royal individual.


"Changes in stalagmite chemistry from ancient caves have now linked the collapse of the Akkadian Empire to climate changes more than 4,000 years ago. Akkadia was the world’s first empire."


Researcher Guang Bao Liu argues that the king of Akkad's territory which would become known as upper Egypt after the predynastic period, known as Scorpion I, was the figure recorded as the Yellow Emperor in Chinese inscriptions. According to some scholars, the Scorpion King unified upper and lower Egypt by claiming victory over a king wearing a bull hat, while Chinese records state that the Yellow Emperor defeated the Yan Emperor who wore a cow-headed hat, unifying the two tribes of Yan and Huang.


Liu also claims it makes sense chronologically, being that the Scorpion king supposedly ruled Ancient Egypt roughly 5,200 years ago, loosely fitting with the Chinese legend of the Yellow Emperor’s 5,000 years of civilization. There are also some interesting similarities between Egyptian hieroglyphics and Chinese script, as noted by Liu. In the paper it is argued that the scorpion symbol found in the tomb of King Scorpion I is linked to the prototype of the character Huang, which translates to ‘yellow’. It is further highlighted that many scorpions found in the Nile valley are yellow in colour, which the researcher claims strengthens the connection.


Other researchers claim that Narmer, a pharaoh of the Early Dynastic Period, was the real unifier of Egypt and the founder of the First Dynasty. Scholars are still in debate as to whether Narmer and the Scorpion King were the same figure. There are even some theories that Narmer may have been the ruler known as Scorpion II, and some suggesting he was the successor to this ruler who may have been charged with expanding Kemets reach into Asia as they eventually did with Sumer and later with The Phoenicians. The Yellow Emperor is also shrouded in mystery, with legend dictating that he became the first ruler of lands that would later become China in 2697 BC, after he brought together the clans of the Yellow River Plain under a single government.



Yu the Great, another legendary Chinese king who established the Xia Dynasty. It is said that Yu the Great is the descendant of the Yellow (Scorpion King) Emperor,


Sun Weidong, a geochemist, gave a public lecture at the University of Science and Technology in Hefei, the capital of Anhui province in eastern China. He discussed geochemistry and also referred to various ancient Chinese texts. Among these was historian Sima Qian's account of the Xia dynasty, regarded as China's first dynasty from 2070 to 1600 B.C. In the Records of the Grand Historian, Sima Qian detailed the empire's topography, noting a stream that split into nine rivers flowing northward before reuniting into a single river that emptied into the sea.


The stream referenced in the text was not China's Yellow River, known for its west-to-east flow. During a lecture, the professor queried the audience about the significant river flowing northward; the correct response was "the Nile." Subsequently, Sun presented a map showcasing the Nile River and its delta, highlighting its nine distributaries merging into the Mediterranean Sea. Observing from the same research institute, the author noted the audience's engaged reactions, their smiles, and soft murmurs revealing their fascination with the ancient Chinese literature's link to Kemet/Egypt's geography.


Sun, a distinguished scientist, has sparked a fervent online debate with his assertion that the founders of Chinese civilization were not ethnically Chinese but were migrants from Egypt. He suggests that the evidence supports an African origin for Ancient China's earliest dynasties. Sun's online statement challenges the traditional view of Chinese civilization's origins, which historians have long established with the narrative: "We are the descendants of the Yan and Yellow Emperor." The historian Sima Qian recognized these legendary figures as the ancestors of the Han Chinese, and the Yellow Emperor's great-grandson, Yu the Great, as the initiator of the semi-legendary Xia dynasty.


The casting of the Scorpion King now makes so much sense!

These narratives served as the foundational myths of imperial China and were honored for decades beyond the establishment of the Republic in 1912. Consequently, even the most revolutionary figures of the nation—such as Sun Yat-Sen, Chiang Kai-Shek, and Mao Zedong, the founder of the People's Republic—have, at various times, felt compelled to pay homage at the tomb of the Yellow Emperor. The frequently cited assertion that Chinese civilization is about 5,000 years old also originates from the purported era of this mythical sovereign, who was possibly referred to as the Scorpion King.







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