>>10689876>>10689888yes, even with the correction you made it all points to the same place: the assyrian empire in mesopotamia (middle-east, Iran,Iraq) "babylon" was specifically the southern region of that same empire, they even went down to egypt!
the region of jerusalem was inhabit by canaanites and phoenicians theirs is the cult of baal-moloch in fact there was a king named "baal" ruling Tyre in circa 600BC the assyrian empire conquered them and heavily influenced them culturally, this is why Noah is the same "demi-god" figure from the assyrian epic of Gilgamesh, so the old testament and what we consider "jewish tales" are actually based on the assyrian cosmology (zoroastrian, the three wize men are three zoroastrian magi ) this is ironic considering how much jews hate iranians and iraq
https://www.ancient.eu/assyria/ >Assyria reached from Mesopotamia (Iraq) through Asia Minor (Turkey) and down through Egypt The empire began modestly at the city of Ashur located in Mesopotamia north-east of Babylon originally spoke and wrote Akkadian before the easier to use Aramaic language became more popular>According to one interpretation of passages in the biblical Book of Genesis, Ashur (capital of assyria) was founded by a man named Ashur son of Shem, son of Noah, after the Great Flood, who then went on to found the other important Assyrian cities. A more likely account is that the city was named Ashur after the deity of that name sometime in the 3rd millennium BCE; the same god's name is the origin for áAssyria'. The biblical version of the origin of Ashur appears later in the historical record (Genesis is dated to c. 1450 BCE at the earliest, 5th century BCE latest) and seems to have been adopted by the Assyrians after they had accepted Christianity, is thought to be a re-interpretation of their early history more in keeping with their newly-adopted belief system