The Anunnaki Cylinder Seal VA 243 is one of the most discussed artifacts from ancient Mesopotamia, often cited in claims about ancient knowledge of the solar system. In this video, we examine the seal based on what the evidence actually shows, not modern speculation.
VA 243 is a small Akkadian cylinder seal dated to around 2300 BCE, discovered in Mesopotamia and currently housed in the Vorderasiatisches Museum in Berlin. The inscription on the seal has been translated by multiple Assyriologists and identifies a deity, a worshipper, and a servant, not astronomical bodies. While the image includes star-like symbols, professional scholars agree these are symbolic representations, commonly used in Mesopotamian art to denote divinity or the heavens, not a scientific diagram of planets.
This discussion breaks down:
What the cuneiform text on VA 243 actually says
How ancient Mesopotamians represented stars and gods in art
Why claims of a hidden “extra planet” are not supported by translations
The difference between symbolic cosmology and modern astronomy
No dismissals, no hype, just historical context, primary sources, and what we can reasonably conclude from the artifact itself.
Knowledge is power, but only when it’s grounded in evidence.