Ur Kasdim (Abraham’s birthplace) is Urartu (Land of the God of War)
Ur Kasdim is Chaldea but wich Chaldea?
Ur-Kasdim is generally identified with the great Sumerian city of Ur in southern Iraq. And yet, a look at the geography in Genesis 11 points to a different location much farther north.
The white Chaldeans of Northern Mesopotamia, the land of the war god Khaldi:
Ur: city
kaṣādum
[Army → War]
revolt, attack,
OA : (D) : to seize hold , to take by force , to take possession (goods or persons) , to capture / confiscate / take prisoner (?) / to carry away as a prisoner (?).
How, then, does one explain the latter part of the expression, namely Kasdim? As noted, the Chaldeans lived in southern Mesopotamia, but they were not native to the land, having migrated there in the early to mid-first millennium B.C.E.
Where were they from before that? The most likely answer is northern Mesopotamia. The best evidence comes from the Greek historian Xenophon (431–۳۵۴ B.C.E.), who mentions the white Chaldeans as a warlike people blocking the way to Armenia (Anabasis 4.3.4), and as neighbors of the Armenians but at war with them (Cyropaedia 3.1.34). Xenophon further mentions the Chaldeans in connection with the Carduchi (that is, the ancient Kurds) (Anabasis 5.5.17). In fact, to this day, the term lives on within the Chaldean Christian community, which inhabits the region.
The synonymy of Khaldi (god of war) with Kasdim suggests that the Chaldeans in this chapter were the white Chaldeans of Urartu (Uru-arzu, land of the God of War)
कलह m. kalaha fight
देव m. deva god
It seems that the Avestan name of Deva Arezura (i.e. the foreign god of war), which is also the name of a mountain on the Roman border, meaning god of war, was the name of Mount Ararat, which must have been the place of Khaldi, the god of war and kingship, the great god of the Urartians:
अरर m. arara war
थ Tha . a mountain
The Avestan name for Urartu and Armenia (Land of the Lion), Arzahi, can be taken to mean the land of the [lion-riding] god of war.
The name of the war god Khaldi has been considered to be originally non-Urartu. It can be taken as another name for Tor (the roaring and deadly war god of Scythian, Papai).
The name Abram (the exalted father) itself is synonymous with the Scythian Targitai (Tarigi-tai, the exalted father).
Scythians remained in the city of Bet She’an (Scythopolis) in Israel and Israel means God’s chosen people (Scythian aryans):
I think that the name Israel is derived from the Scythian’s Aryans through the Scythian in city Bet She’an (Scythopolis) in Israel. Because the name Jacob (wrestler) to whom Israel is given corresponds to the name Partatua (very strong), a Scythian ruler of the 7th century BC. Abram (exalted father) corresponds to Targitai (exalted father), Isaac corresponds to Ishpakai, and Joseph (Youzarsif) corresponds to the Scythian Madyes, who returned from Egypt after collecting tribute from the Egyptian pharaoh Psammetik
.