According to mainstream history, the historical city is situated near the modern town of Hilla, but David Rohl suggests that's actually Eridu. The toponym can be found near Fustat, as well as in a nickname for Avignon. The Babylonian Talmud was an important source for the Kabbalah, which originated in the Provence: Are there any mutualities between pileolus & kippah?
The migration of the papacy was significant for the waning power of the Holy Roman Empire, whose dynasty partially seems to duplicate the Judaean Kingdom & the Byzantine Empire. The New Chronology further proposes the following identifications:
- The medieval Trojan War is the original of the Fall of Babylon & Charles of Anjou is the original of Cyrus the Great: Did Angeloi avenge their earlier defeat against the Latin Empire, partially duplicated as the demise of the Angevin Empire, as Palaiologoi?
- Sophia Palaiologina was married to Ivan the Great, who fiercely renewed the kremlin of Moscow, described in the book of Nehemia as the reconstruction of Jerusalem. After beating Veliky Novgorod, the Grand Prince exiled their nobility as a Nebuchadnezzar: Was the captivity of the Judaeans rather a duplicate?
The toponym thus seems to fit many locations: The book of Revelation describes the whore of Babylon, whose beast might refer to a city with seven hills. Many cities share this feature, but Rome is best known for it & officially instigated the fourth crusade: Might it appropriatly explain the nickname for Avignon?
The city was probably founded by Jesus Christ, the equivalent of Aeneas: It sided with the Cathars, who were crushed by the Catholics. The priory of Sion was originally the protector of the Holy Grail: Did the victors seize the secret society & add their Merovingian Dynasty?
The city of Zion, which is often rebooted to avoid a crash of the system, houses rebels, who move through the matrix of machines by the hovercraft Nebuchadnezzar, whose mark refers to the gospel of Mark: Are the teachings of Jesus Christ helpful to escape the Matrix?