Introduction: Twelve Federal States of the 7th Millennium BC

Cain-Abel = Caabel = Ca-bal, and Ca-balhwan(居發桓) Emperor

History only becomes truth when it is spoken about. This study corrects a long-unknown history.

The Korean historical text Hwandangogi is made up of four parts: Samsungi, Dangun Segi, Northern Buyeo, and Taebackilsa. Samsungi records the history of seven generations of Hwanguk, beginning in 7199 BCE and lasting for 3,301 years. After the reign of the seven Hwanins (emperors), the dynasty continued through 18 generations of Hwanung emperors, followed by 47 emperors of Dangun.

The 18 generations of Hwanung, lasting 1,565 years, align with the 8 generations of the Cain-Noah era, which lasted 1,656 years. This study compares the genealogies of these two families (from 3898 BCE to 238 BCE). As a result, the ancient histories of Korea and Israel are shown to be truthful.

The Budoji, another historical text, confirms that the Hwanung empire was followed by a dynasty of 12 federal Hwanin rulers.

Emperor Ca-balhwan, in 3898 BCE, ordered the creation of written scripts known as Shenji (神誌), or Nokdo scripts, modeled after deer footprints. These scripts are mentioned in Taebackilsa and Samsungji and were discovered by a research team from Yanbian University in northern China, where many Korean immigrants historically settled.

It is significant to note that ancient Korean scripts bear similarities to ancient Hebrew scripts, Egyptian hieroglyphs, Dravidian scripts from India, and others from regions such as Jiahu and Dispilio (Greece, circa 5202 BCE).

Hwanguk, the ancient kingdom of 12 states, had its capital in Inner Mongolia for thousands of years. The influence of Hwanguk extended from the Ural Mountains and Mongolia in the east to India in the south, as well as to Egypt and Greece, with archaeologists uncovering ancient scripts in these regions.



The five chapters of this manuscript cover a unique synthesis of linguistic, archaeological, and historical perspectives and evidence, in order to demonstrate shared histories across seemingly disparate peoples.

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