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The Sumerian King List is one of the strangest ancient records ever found.
Preserved on tablets and prisms like the famous Weld-Blundell Prism, it claims that kingship “descended from heaven,” that 8 kings ruled before the flood, and that those rulers reigned for a combined 241,200 years.
That sounds impossible.
But maybe the real question is not whether ancient kings literally lived for tens of thousands of years.
Maybe the real question is why one of humanity’s oldest political traditions describes power as something handed down from above.
In this episode of Divergent Chronicles, we investigate the Sumerian King List, the ancient cities of Eridu, Uruk, Kish, and Lagash, the apkallu sages, Mesopotamian flood traditions, Eridu Genesis, Berossus, and the deeper origin story behind kingship itself.
Was the Sumerian King List mythology? Political theology? Ancient propaganda? Or was it preserving a distorted memory of something much older?
This is not about proving aliens, gods, or demigods ruled the Earth.
It is about asking why some of the earliest written records of civilization describe authority as something humanity inherited… not something humanity created.
Because maybe the strangest part of the Sumerian King List is not the impossible kings.
Maybe it is the idea that power was never meant to rise from the people.
Maybe it was always meant to come from above.
By Divergent Files Podcast4.5
88 ratings
The Sumerian King List is one of the strangest ancient records ever found.
Preserved on tablets and prisms like the famous Weld-Blundell Prism, it claims that kingship “descended from heaven,” that 8 kings ruled before the flood, and that those rulers reigned for a combined 241,200 years.
That sounds impossible.
But maybe the real question is not whether ancient kings literally lived for tens of thousands of years.
Maybe the real question is why one of humanity’s oldest political traditions describes power as something handed down from above.
In this episode of Divergent Chronicles, we investigate the Sumerian King List, the ancient cities of Eridu, Uruk, Kish, and Lagash, the apkallu sages, Mesopotamian flood traditions, Eridu Genesis, Berossus, and the deeper origin story behind kingship itself.
Was the Sumerian King List mythology? Political theology? Ancient propaganda? Or was it preserving a distorted memory of something much older?
This is not about proving aliens, gods, or demigods ruled the Earth.
It is about asking why some of the earliest written records of civilization describe authority as something humanity inherited… not something humanity created.
Because maybe the strangest part of the Sumerian King List is not the impossible kings.
Maybe it is the idea that power was never meant to rise from the people.
Maybe it was always meant to come from above.

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