HISTORICAL PROOF ISRAEL EXISTED AND MIGRATED TO EUROPE The texts of the tablets reveal the Israelites, originally known to the Assyrians, as "Khumri" were placed in captivity near the river Habor, (in northern Assyria) in Gozan, and among the Medes in northern Iran. In captivity the Israelites were renamed "Gimira" and "Cimmerians.” Although Medes and the Gimira were occupying part of the land of the Mannai, they were a distinct people Los textos de las tablillas revelan que los israelitas, originalmente conocidos por los asirios, como "Khumri" fueron colocados en cautiverio cerca del río Habor, (en el norte de Asiria) en Gozan, y entre los medos en el norte de Irán. En cautiverio, los israelitas pasaron a llamarse "Gimira" y "Cimmerios". Aunque Medes y Gimira ocupaban parte de la tierra de los Mannai, eran un pueblo distinto The Behistun Stone is the same inscription written in three languages – Persian, Elam and Bablonian languages. The Persian word for “Saka” is called “Gimiri” in the Babylonian language. The inscription connects the people known in Old Persian and Elamite as Saka, Sacae or Scythian with the people known in Babylonian as Gimirri or Cimmerian. This is important because the Assyrian's referred to the Northern Kingdom of Israel in their records as the "House of Khumri", named after Israel's King Omri of the 8th century BCE. Phonetically "Khumri", "Omri", and "Gimiri" are similar. George Rawlinson, Sir Henry Rawlinson's younger brother, connected the Saka/Gimiri of the Behistun Inscription with deported Israelites: "We have reasonable grounds for regarding the Gimirri, or Cimmerians, who first appeared on the confines of Assyria and Media in the seventh century B.C., and the Sacae of the Behistun Rock, nearly two centuries later, as identical with the Beth -Khumree of Samaria, or the Ten Tribes of the House of Israel." -George Rawlinson, note in his translation of History of Herodotus, Book VII, p. 37 ASSYRIAN CUNIFORMS FOUND In 1847, Austin Layard drove his spade into a mound at Kiyunjik and struck the walls of an Assyrian palace. He had found Sennacherib's palace at the capital of Nineveh. Over 23,000 cuneiform clay tablets were found in two rooms. These were shipped to the British Museum for translation and study. These Assyrian cuniform tablets were translated by Professor Leroy Waterman at the University of Michigan. He wrote many articles based on his archaeological and linguistic research. He was a professor at the University of Michigan from 1915 to 1945. He also studied at Oxford University (1900-02), the University of Berlin in (1906-07), and the Universit and the University of Chicago where he received his Ph.D. degree in 1912. The texts of the tablets reveal the Israelites, originally known to the Assyrians, as "Khumri" were placed in captivity near the river Habor, (in northern Assyria) in Gozan, and among the Medes in northern Iran. In captivity the Israelites were renamed "Gimira" and "Cimmerians.” Although Medes and the Gimira were occupying part of the land of the Mannai, they were a distinct people