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  • Samyaza
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  • Samyaza (シェムハザ Shemuhaza) is one of the three members of the Grigori: the supreme advisors of the True Cross Order.
  • Samyaza (Aramaic: שמיחזה, Greek: Σεμιαζά) also Semihazah, Shemyazaz, Sêmîazâz, Semjâzâ,Samjâzâ, Shemyaza, Shemhazai, and Amez[y]arak (Ethiopic corruption) is a fallen angel of apocryphal Jewish and Christian tradition that ranked in the heavenly hierarchy as one of the Grigori (meaning "Watchers" in Greek). The name 'Shemyaza[z]' means 'infamous rebellion', the combination of 'shem' [meaning 'name' or 'fame' {whether positive or negative}] + 'azaz' [which means 'rebellion' or 'arrogance' as a negative particle]. Michael Knibb lists him as “the (or my) name has seen” or “he sees the name”. The interesting thing about the second interpretation is there is a tale about Semjâzâ knowing the explicit name of God and making a deal with a human Istahar to tell her the name.
  • Samyaza was an angel who fell and married a human woman, Lilith (later Morgan). He fought over Noah's ark in Eye of the Oracle as a leader of the Watchers. Lilith drained some of his power in an attempt to get onto the ark, and he later brought it up in questioning her trustworthiness, but she convinced him that if she hadn't both of them would've been imprisoned, and then she would have been no use in freeing him. She later contrived his escape and he and his Watchers attacked the earth in Tears of a Dragon. Their children, a race of giants, were called the Nephilim.
  • Samyaza (Aramaic: שמיחזה, Greek: Σεμιαζά) also Semihazah, Shemyazaz, Sêmîazâz, Semjâzâ, Samjâzâ, Shemyaza, and Shemhazai. is a fallen angel of apocryphal Jewish and Christian tradition that ranked in the heavenly hierarchy as one of the Grigori (meaning "Watchers" in Greek). The name 'Shemyaza[z]' means 'infamous rebellion', the combination of 'shem' [meaning 'name' or 'fame' {whether positive or negative}] + 'azaz' [which means 'rebellion' or 'arrogance' as a negative particle]. Michael Knibb lists him as “the (or my) name has seen” or “he sees the name”. The interesting thing about the second interpretation is there is a tale about Semjâzâ knowing the explicit name of God and making a deal with a human Istahar to tell her the name.
  • , whose name can be translated roughly as "the infamous rebellion" is a powerful Fallen Angel from Christian texts - he was said to be one of the leaders of the Watchers, a group of angels who rebelled against God's will and mated with humanity while also providing them with forbidden knowledge.Samyaza is so great that he has often been argued to be an alter-ego ofSatan while others claimed it's another for Satan, however some scholars believe it is important to separate the two - believing that although similiar the two are completely different supernatural beings.Samyaza is said, by some, to be one of the few beings in creation that knows God's true name and once offered to bestow knowledge of it to Istahar: this special knowledge has earned him his other title of "he sees the name".Alth
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abstract
  • Samyaza (シェムハザ Shemuhaza) is one of the three members of the Grigori: the supreme advisors of the True Cross Order.
  • , whose name can be translated roughly as "the infamous rebellion" is a powerful Fallen Angel from Christian texts - he was said to be one of the leaders of the Watchers, a group of angels who rebelled against God's will and mated with humanity while also providing them with forbidden knowledge.Samyaza is so great that he has often been argued to be an alter-ego ofSatan while others claimed it's another for Satan, however some scholars believe it is important to separate the two - believing that although similiar the two are completely different supernatural beings.Samyaza is said, by some, to be one of the few beings in creation that knows God's true name and once offered to bestow knowledge of it to Istahar: this special knowledge has earned him his other title of "he sees the name".Although powerful Samyaza would be punished, like all of his associates, by a wrathful God after they taught humanity the secrets of war - being banished to the valleys of the earth until the Day Of Judgement.
  • Samyaza (Aramaic: שמיחזה, Greek: Σεμιαζά) also Semihazah, Shemyazaz, Sêmîazâz, Semjâzâ,Samjâzâ, Shemyaza, Shemhazai, and Amez[y]arak (Ethiopic corruption) is a fallen angel of apocryphal Jewish and Christian tradition that ranked in the heavenly hierarchy as one of the Grigori (meaning "Watchers" in Greek). The name 'Shemyaza[z]' means 'infamous rebellion', the combination of 'shem' [meaning 'name' or 'fame' {whether positive or negative}] + 'azaz' [which means 'rebellion' or 'arrogance' as a negative particle]. Michael Knibb lists him as “the (or my) name has seen” or “he sees the name”. The interesting thing about the second interpretation is there is a tale about Semjâzâ knowing the explicit name of God and making a deal with a human Istahar to tell her the name.
  • Samyaza was an angel who fell and married a human woman, Lilith (later Morgan). He fought over Noah's ark in Eye of the Oracle as a leader of the Watchers. Lilith drained some of his power in an attempt to get onto the ark, and he later brought it up in questioning her trustworthiness, but she convinced him that if she hadn't both of them would've been imprisoned, and then she would have been no use in freeing him. She later contrived his escape and he and his Watchers attacked the earth in Tears of a Dragon. Their children, a race of giants, were called the Nephilim.
  • Samyaza (Aramaic: שמיחזה, Greek: Σεμιαζά) also Semihazah, Shemyazaz, Sêmîazâz, Semjâzâ, Samjâzâ, Shemyaza, and Shemhazai. is a fallen angel of apocryphal Jewish and Christian tradition that ranked in the heavenly hierarchy as one of the Grigori (meaning "Watchers" in Greek). The name 'Shemyaza[z]' means 'infamous rebellion', the combination of 'shem' [meaning 'name' or 'fame' {whether positive or negative}] + 'azaz' [which means 'rebellion' or 'arrogance' as a negative particle]. Michael Knibb lists him as “the (or my) name has seen” or “he sees the name”. The interesting thing about the second interpretation is there is a tale about Semjâzâ knowing the explicit name of God and making a deal with a human Istahar to tell her the name.