1177 BC: The Rise of the Enki Bloodline
Table of Contents
Historians mark 1177 BC as the catastrophic end of the Bronze Age where mighty empires fell to famine, migration, and unidentified “Sea Peoples.”
The cause of this can be traced through the history of the Anunnaki aliens who were called ‘gods’.
After the Great Deluge of 10,800 BC, the Anunnaki decided to leave Earth, leaving behind half-Anunnaki leaders that became kings and royal bloodlines.
The dominant bloodlines were the Enlil faction, from the Anunnaki leader Enlil.
The bloodline from his little brother Enki was far less dominant.
In fact, the Great Deluge was supposed to wipe out the Enki bloodlines as the Atlaneteans.
But Enki faction saved some Atlanteans, namely Noah meaning “rest”, who was also called Atrahasis “wise” or Utnapishtim “He who saw life”.
This was to continue the Enki bloodline.
The Anunnaki completed their pullout of Earth Around 1200 AD. This left a power vacuum that allowed the Enki bloodline, as Noah’s descendants, to take over from the Enlil faction which were represented by the older Egyptians, Hittites, Trojans, Minoans, and Mycenaeans.
Noah’s most notable descendants were:
- Jews
- Greeks
- Medians (Iran)
- Canaanites
- Ethiopians
- Assyrians
- Babylonians
- Syrians
- Arabs
The Old Testament explains in detail how the Anunnaki, through Moses and Joshua, coordinated their attacks to conquer much larger territories with far fewer troops against more established empires.
This coordination, combined with the technological edge of the Anunnaki, allowed the synchronicity and speed of the collapse.
- Their advanced geo-weather weaponry could induce earthquakes, droughts, floods, famines, and the biblical “plagues of Egypt” that destabilized the great kingdoms.
The infamous Sea Peoples were not random pirates, but the maritime arm of the Enki-aligned nations, descendants of Noah from coastal regions.
- These coordinated assaults from the sea, while their kinsmen who had migrated inland—the proto-Jews, Assyrians, and Babylonians—consolidated power from within.
All of this created a total geopolitical reset.
The old Enlil-aligned powers fell to the new Iron Age empires—Assyria, Babylon, and later Greece—all tracing their mythic origins to the Enki-Noah bloodline.
1177 BC, therefore, was not an end, but a shift of power to the Enki faction which led to the current dominance of Christanity and Islam in the world.
The Great Flood as Reference for Years
The huge impact of the Great Flood at 10,800 BC has affected over half of humanity, just as the fall of Lemuria much earlier has affected the other half.
Currently, the world uses the birth of Jesus as the reference for the years of Rome as the BC/AD, or its secularized counterpart BCE/CE.
To accept it as the “Common Era” is a form of historical acquiescence to the Romans or the West.
We would not accept the “Year of the Horse” as universal if Ming China had colonized the globe.
So why do we universally count time from a point central to only the Romans?
A truly common calendar must be anchored in a moment of shared, species-defining significance—one that marks the beginning of our story.
- That moment is not a religious founding, but a cataclysm and rebirth: The Great Flood of 10,800 BC.
This global deluge, etched in the myths of over 300 cultures from the Epic of Gilgamesh to the story of Noah and African creation myths, represents a universal reset.
It is the baseline catastrophe from which all surviving civilizations had to rebuild.
The years should be denoted as AF (After Flood) and BF (Before Flood).
Today is not 2026 CE, but the 8th day of Month 1 in the year 12,826 AF.
We set the deluge start on 1 November (10,800 BF)—the Day of the Dead in Mexico, symbolizing the drowning of the old world order.
The New Year begins on 25 December, a month later, marking not a birth but a rebirth of humanity.
This is not just a change of dates, but a declaration of solidarity with those first humans who fought against the Anunnaki which then caused the Deluge in retaliation.
Adopting the AF/BF calendar is thus a social and political act of maturity and independence.
It is a declaration that we humans can stand on our own feet and make an impact on the universe, just like a teenager who has reached early adulthood.