(Please read from the start)
Both Neith and the Evil Lady are Sebetti royals. But one is showing her royalty via dressing in Red (in Mesopotamia) while Neith is not flaunting her royalty and is not wearing red or purple. Throughout History the color purple is famous for being worn by all the kings and queens – including nobility and the high religious figures, worldwide. Here is a quick read about it: www.pheniciens.com/articles/pourpre.php?lang=en
“Between legend and reality, purple has always been linked, in one way or another, to the Phoenicians, it contributed to their reputation. Some historians reported that the Greeks gave them the name of Phoenician (Greek phoenix) in relation to the purple color, which they had made as one of their principal specialties.
The legend tells that the discovery of the purple was attributed to the god Melqart Heracles. While he was walking on the beach with the nymph Tyros, his dog found a Murex and munched on it. Its jaws tinged purple color. The nymph admired the color and asked the God to offer her a cloth with such a beautiful color. In order to please his sweetheart, Melqart, ordered to collect the seashells and to prepare a tincture of this crimson color, and make a dyed tunic witch delight the heart of the nymph.
From an archaeological point of view, the old remains of the dye-works discovered on the eastern coast of the Mediterranean Sea, proved that the purple dye industry existed there since ancient times. In 1934, François Thureau-Dangin (1872-1944), archaeologist and French epigraphist published a cuneiform text from Ugarit, which stipulated that in about 3500 years ago, a local merchant noted the quantity of purple wool owed to him by some persons, who appear to be dyers. Such texts lead us to think that the wool was distributed to the dyers in order to be colored, and then recuperated by merchants who resold it locally or exported it. Those commercial transactions indicate the presence of the purple industry on the Canaanite coast in the middle of the second millennium BC.”
>> We’ve already seen all of this information but here it’s more details and explained in a better way. This is why I’m putting it. B.M.C. = British Museum Catalogue.
“In written documents, testimonials about purple great value are numerous and varied. Two biblical texts talk about it: Chronicles 2: 2-14: "Hiram Abi, the son of a woman of the daughters of Dan, and a Tyrian father, skilful to work in gold, silver, brass and iron, stone and wood, and with purple and blue …". Or Chronicles 2: 3-14: "He made the veil of blue and purple and crimson yarn and fine linen, with cherubim worked into it". Through these two examples, it is important to emphasize that the impact of the Phoenician craftsmen, since the first millennium BC, has been recognized and was very important in ancient times.”
>> Everyone think the Phoenician were great craftsmen, but they place this skill in the first millennium B.C. What if this was earlier, much earlier but kept hidden on purpose?
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