was zeus a berber god?

was zeus a berber god?

someone asked me recently about my pseudo and why zeus and what has he do with the berbers. According to historians the original graphic form of the name of the high greek god was theus and not zeus .it was changed to zeus by early christians for its association with theos =god which usually denotes the christian god. the name theus in turn was a hellinism of theut or thot , the egyptian god of knowledge who took hermes as his messenger(hermes is consdered as the father of alchemy , hermitism, neo-platonism, gnosticism , sufism and all perrenial philosophies of the near east and north africa).
william hodgeson in his ''Grammatical Sketch and Specimens of the Berber Language'' stated that Thot (also spelled Thoth, Theut, Thut or Tot) is an egyptianism of the berber word /titt/ (pronounced thitt) and signifies the eye or the Source of water(spring) in the Berber language(names of springs near my home village on the aures mountains always start with the phrase /thitt n/ =source of ..).
the greeks of siwa (the mecca of the berber pagan religion)were right when they identified their god zeus with the high berber god ammon and and the term ammon which ,among others, was derived from berber word aman (water), another association with the berber term thitt(water source, spring) and of course with the more famous berber diety of rain and water ,Anzar..
to be continued.

3.5
Average: 3.5 (4 votes)
Your rating: None

Comments

thitt femanal nam = eye sun =

thitt femanal nam = eye
sun = iti-j =big eye or masculin nam of thitt,maybe eye of god,dja by rasta man,aton is olso sun god of egypte.

A history update for me...

I have always enjoyed reading about the various 'gods' and the etymology of the names. This was a very interesting article. Not only interesting, but informative. I know very little of the Berber identity and how it fits into the romanized world, but you have given me much to consider. It is refreshing for me to see a different(and dare I say, truer?) view of history, a less biased view, if you will, than that of my old history books. I thank you. R. Stevenson