The First King of the World, the King of the Hungarians,
the Universal Master, the World’s First Spiritual Master
King Nemrót was the world’s first king.
– Mrs. Lajos Szabó, Aunt Jucika 1967
The first king of Earth. He was the forefather of the Hungarians.
With him was the great luminous celestial ring of the Hungarians.
This ring had life.
It moved and radiated light.
And when He left, the ring didn’t go with him.
Because it was a law that the ring had to stay where we were, with us, until the end of this world, until the light is permanently lost. That is why it was with Atila, with the Árpádians, with the white monks.
Until it is taken back by the Shining Lord of the world.
But if he takes it back, he will take us back from this wretched world too.
Back, to where His bright home shines.
From where we have come.
Where the heavenly light shines infinitely always.
Where, as the ancients say, there is eternal Light and Freedom…
The first ancient king of the empire inhabited by the people we now call the Sumerians is mentioned in our Hungarian tradition as our first king. According to tradition, the ancient royal lineage of the Hungarians was passed down through the Turul clan in the House of Árpád. At the very beginning of the charismatic Hungarian royal family, the House of Árpád, stands a mythical king, the world’s first king. This ancient king spoke Hungarian and was also the king of the world. According to this tradition the king of the world is therefore the king of the Hungarians. This tradition seems timeless. Nemrót is a kind, wise, giant king who founds the world’s first kingdom and establishes a dynasty. In the Buddhist inner path tradition, he is the world’s first king Mahasammata, who’s direct descendant was the Scythian prince Siddhartha Gautama, the Enlightened Scythian Sage Buddha.
The Great Hunter – Great Spiritual Master
According to our star myths, Nemrót walks above the stars as a hunter, but the Old Testament also tells us that he began to become powerful on Earth.
He was a mighty hunter before the Lord,
so it is said: a mighty hunter before the Lord, like Nemrót
The legend of the hunt of Nemrót, Hunor and Magor is known, in which we also meet the miracle deer. In the tradition of the inner path, hunting means following the spiritual path.
Thus, the Hungarian tale preserves the ancient tradition of the great hunter – the great spiritual Master – and also the fact that the ancient king speaks Hungarian. It is very interesting that, according to the Old Testament, before the flood, the language of culture was the language of Nemrót. It is only during the construction of the Tower of Babel that humanity, the thinking cultural stratum, loses its language. Nemrót’s language is spoken by the cultural stratum, but in connection with our fairy tale tradition, the Árpád House speaks his language! So we have a picture of Nemrót’s primordial tale. Once upon a time we had a unified tradition, at the beginning with Nemrót as the first king, and this mythological heritage is reflected in the miracle deer, in the Árpád House, its role shines in the case of the Paulists, in the case of Pilis as a sacred place, and so on.
The Bright Ring
The Universal Monarch has seven special attributes in the tradition of the inner path: the precious ring or wheel, the precious jewel, the precious queen, the precious minister, the precious elephant, the precious horse, and the precious general. The seven attributes of the kingdom internally correspond to the seven branches of the path of awakening, that is, seven qualities that all enlightened and awakening heroes possess as factors in achieving awakening.
The first and greatest possession of a Universal Monarch is a precious shining ring or wheel made of gold, representing both secular and spiritual sovereignty, a power that extends in all directions to guide the monarch’s army. The ring also acts as a vehicle to help the Universal Monarch travel across all continents. The precious ring of brilliance inwardly corresponds to the first branch of spiritual awakening, which is transcending knowledge. The precious ring allows the World King to triumph against any attack or war. In the same way, transcending knowledge is what enables man to overcome the domination of confused emotions and ignorance.
The second of the seven royal attributes is the precious jewel, which, in its inner interpretation, corresponds to the virtue of faith.
The third, the precious queen, corresponds to deep contemplation.
The fourth, the precious minister, corresponds to joy.
The fifth, the precious elephant, corresponds to attentiveness.
The sixth, the precious horse, corresponds to zeal.
The seventh, the precious general, corresponds to the spirit of equality.
Tower of Babel – Being Close to the Kingdom of Heaven
According to the Bible, Nemrót had the Tower of Babel built. Our ancient myth treasure also refers to him as a tower builder, but unlike in the Old Testament, not as someone who builds a tower to attack from there, but to be close to the Celestial Kingdom. He is not attacking God, but wants to know God, the Eternal Light. It is worth remembering that our ancestors always went to the heights to pray. The towers of the ancient Hungarian tradition were slender but tall, and the táltos priests prayed on elevated places to be close to the Eternal Light. It is interesting that in our tales about Fairy Ilona there is one that says that Fairy Ilona lives on top of a tower as a fairy princess, so she is closest to the Sun, the Light of the World, the natural brightness of pure spirit, omniscient wisdom and infinite compassionate love.
In the interpretation of the inner path, the building of the Tower of Babel represents a spiritual practice still commonly used today. These exercises are meditations on the secret mandala (golden garden or pure circle) of the Diamond Way, which requires the Master’s authorisation and oral explanation. In practice, the practitioner builds a pure heavenly realm with a heavenly palace in the center. They are built both internally, spiritually – imaginary – and externally, materially.
Occasionally, huge temple complexes are built in this way. The most well-known of these are the Samye Temple in Tibet, the Angkor Wat in Cambodia, the Borobodur in Indonesia, the Ziggurats in Mesopotamia. In the center or at the top of the temple, in the most sacred sanctuary, the Master—the sacred king—immerses himself in what can be called the union of Heaven and Earth. In this experience, he himself is the King of the World, the Enlightened One; the world is the pure heavenly realm; and the inhabitants of the palace, the deities who can be numerous, are mediators—angels—of enlightened love.ala.
The “confusion of tongues” mentioned in the Bible actually means that the palace deities spread out all over the world and help each being in their own individual way, that is, they address each of the countless beings in their own language and give them the help they need. So it is not the confusion of languages, but rather communication in countless languages.
Previous to the construction of the Tower of Babel, there is only one written record of Nemrót being mentioned as a “cultural hero” who gave writing, knowledge and faith to the people.
Universal Master – Nemrót – Gilgamesh – Hercules – Padmasambhava
Nemrót had two sons: Hunor and Magor, whose descendants were the Huns and the Hungarians, who, according to Tarihi Üngürüsz (The History of the Hungarians), spoke the same language.
Their story, the chase of the Wonder Deer, is placed in the country of Ajem, which lies in present-day Iraq (Mesopotamia) and Iran, as shown in the surviving writings. A city was named after each of the boys: MUGEIR (Magor?) in Chaldea, and HUN-URI (Hunor?) in Ajem.
Herodotus, called the father of historiography, derives the Scythians from Hercules, who had three sons: Agatirs, Gelon and Scythian. Hercules of the Greeks is the Greek version of Gilgamesh in Mesopotamia. The Nemrót-Gilgamesh-Hercules tradition of the old Scythians was still alive in the time of the Hungarian King Matthias, as evidenced, among other things, by the fact that Matthias erected a statue of the ancestor of the nation, Hercules.
In ancient Sumerian language records we find the words KUS and KÁM. (Kam’s son is Kus, who “begat Nemrót”). KAM means “the Divine Perfection of Knowledge.” Sumerian dictionaries interpret the sign KUS as “Divine Disposition”, and the cuneiform sign KUS means “horned animal”, by which we mean Aries.
From the cuneiform clay tablets one can read the creation story of the Chaldean belief. According to this, KUS-KOS originated from Kam, the world of the Perfection of Divine Knowledge. In Hungarian, the Great King Nemrót was the first teacher of the Kush-kos people, our ancestors and the world.
In Greek mythology, Hercules is the son of the supreme god, Zeus. He endured twelve major and many minor trials, triumphing over armies of demons for the good of men. In the teaching of the Buddhist inner path, the Lotus Born (Padmasambhava) is the earthly apparition of the supreme Buddha, the Light of World, the reality body Amitabha.
In Greek mythology, Hercules is the supreme god, the son of Zeus. He endured twelve major and many minor trials, triumphing over armies of demons for the good of men. In the teaching of the Buddhist inner path, the Lotus Born (Padmasambhava) is the supreme Buddha, the earthly apparition of the Light of World, the reality body Amitabha.
The Lotus Born in the Tibetan Buddhist tradition of the inner path is the Universal Master who, one thousand three hundred years ago, overcoming many obstacles, subduing the demonic forces standing in the way of the path, and putting them at the service of the path, introduced to Tibet a pure, living tradition of non-dogmatic spirituality.
Nemrót the Panther
Nemrót was known to the Sumerians as NIB-UR. According to them, he was the son of the Light of the World, EN-LIL. In Sumerian means NIB-UR Lord Panther. It is striking that from Hercules in Greece to Nemrót in Mesopotamia, we find the panther tradition everywhere.
Among the people called Sumerians, for example, we find that they wore a shoulder cover garment made of panther skin as a badge of majesty as early as 3000 BC, and it should be remembered that the kings of the Hungarian Árpád dynasty wore similar clothing.
In the Hermitage, in the collection of Tsar Peter the Great, there is a golden panther, which the catalogue says was found in one of the oldest tombs of a Scythian king, dating from the seventh century BC, and such depictions of the panther were a very important factor in later Sarmatian and Hunnic symbolism, so it is probably a figure in ancient mythology. We also meet the panther tradition at Álmos and Árpád, a charismatic tradition is attached to it.
The Constellations of Orion and Gemini
Several researchers identify the constellation Orion with Nemrót. Orion is the home of King Nemrót and home of Prince Csaba. Celestial home, celestial center. We have a special relationship to him. We must assume a connection between the “bright home” and our so-called white Christianity, the latter ceased to exist with the extinction of the House of Árpád (It is known that white Christianity was neither Roman nor Orthodox, but specifically Hungarian, and the myth of light played an important role in it).
Orion is the only constellation that is equally visible in the Northern and Southern Hemispheres, so he was considered the Lord of the Sky. Belonging to it did not mean to be a chosen vessel, but a vocation to perform the duties associated with the Pure Inner Light.
The high morality of the Scythians rested on this belief, controlling the perception and way of life not only of individuals, but of society as a whole. We could say that it became a national spiritual path without any hierarchical priestly organization. This was the famous Scythian morality, Scythian beliefs. The ancient Nemrót tradition proclaims to the Nemrótian peoples the protection of the Pure Inner Light through the omniscient gaze of the mighty Nemrót-Orion in the sky. The Nemrótian peoples developed this tradition into a national inner path, and this made their clan so strong that they always won their freedom. We also have data that Orion was also called Hercules.
The Sumerians revered this constellation as the Faithful Shepherd of Heaven, who they believed watched over his people from Heaven.
It is worth noting that the Arabs, who got acquainted with the science of astronomy in Central Asian Chorezm, taught that the constellation Gemini belongs to Orion. This was also said by the ancient Chaldean sages, which is important because our legends also say so. The surviving written tradition unanimously associates the stars of Gemini (Hunor and Magor) with the constellation Orion-Nemrót. This tells us that the part of our legend about Nemrót is according to the heavenly order. This is none other than the Hun-Hungarian prehistory projected from Heaven to Earth according to the Celestial Order.
The ancient Sumerian-Scythian non-dogmatic inner path was stronger than any organized and obligatory “religion.” It was associated with the person of Nemrót, whom his people considered to be of divine origin, the Light of the World, the son of Enlil. It was believed that the soul of the Universal Inner Master, Nemrót, dwells in Orion, and from there watches over his people as the Faithful Shepherd of Heaven. But his soul of Shadow, as NIB-UR-TA, i.e. “Lord Panther moved to the other world”, is in the “Kingdom of the Dead”, the helper of “earthly affairs”.
Just as Jews are proud of their forefather Abraham, we Hungarians should be proud of ours, Nemrót, who descended from Noah. Our chronicles trace the Hungarians to Noah’s two sons, Kam or Japheth. The Pictorial Chronicle family and the Tarih-i Üngürüs derive the Huns and Hungarians from Nemrót through the biblical Kam and Kus. Our people have preserved this faith indelibly in their memory.
The results of the examination of thousands of years old cuneiform documents testify that the Hungarians are a direct descendant of the ancient people living in Mesopotamia, the Chaldean-Sumerian.
Nemrót was very popular in ancient times, and is commemorated in many folklore traditions, records and books. Nemrót initiated the construction of the Tower of Babel, which reached to the sky, uniting heaven and earth. According to some interpretations of cuneiform documents, Nemrot mentioned in the Bible may be a reference to Gilgamesh.
The Tarih-i Üngürüs writes: “In ancient times the clan of the Magyar tribe descended from the children of Nemrót. Nemrót had a wife named Ankisa, with whom he had two sons. One was called Magor (Lord Mag) and the other Hunor (Lord Hun).” Growing up, the boys went hunting with Nemrót, their father. Nemrót found a miraculous game that disappeared on the border of Ajem. Ajem is located in the southern foothills of the Caucasus, in the north of Persia. Here they built a monastery for the boys, where they practiced the inner path deeply for six years. After this they became the spiritual and secular leaders of the Hun and Hungarian peoples.
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This text contains short extracts from the article at the link below, with additions:
https://adoc.pub/vilag-kiralya-magyarok-kiralya-nimrod-nyomaban.html