



The Original Noah's Tzohar
40 Reasons Why To Buy The Tzohar
Why Buy The Tzohar?
1. Singular Provenance — One of a Kind in Human History
The Tzohar presented as the physical embodiment of a moment that predates civilization itself, authenticated to be the original artifact referenced in Genesis 6:16, making it the only physical object tied directly to a foundational human origin story that spans across Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. Assets like this are not discovered twice, offered twice, or debated publicly; they are either secured by history’s decision-makers or lost to them forever.
2. Absolute Scarcity Creates Immediate Pressure
Unlike the Dead Sea Scrolls or the Rosetta Stone, there is no comparison artifact anywhere in the world. In all time, having direct biblical materiality gives it absolute uniqueness. There is only one Tzohar. Every day it remains available is an anomaly, not a guarantee — as history shows that this singular artifact vanished quietly into sovereign vaults and never resurfaced for centuries, in some cases even thousands of years.
3. Irreplaceable Cultural Capital
Owning the Tzohar would anchor a collection not just historically, but mytho-religiously, placing the owner at the apex of global cultural heritage. Once the Tzohar is acquired by a nation, Royal Family, or Institution, the Tzohar more than likely will never return to the open market. Buyers should understand that hesitation today could become a permanent exclusion tomorrow.
4. A Legacy That Outlives Wealth
Because the Tzohar connects to narratives shared by multiple faiths, it transcends any single tradition, making it suitable for multinational cultural diplomacy. Capital fades, but custodianship of a civilizational artifact does not. Ownership of the Tzohar would place the buyer’s name alongside the object in perpetuity — academically, culturally, and historically.
5. Attributed Custodianship by a minimum of 1,000+ Kings and World Leaders
This is a “heritage asset”, not a commodity — its value accrues over centuries, not years. Historical tradition and recorded narratives associate the Tzohar with early royal custodians, including ancient Biblical Near Eastern Kings, Temple Priests and Authorities, and many other Sovereign leaders and Protectors who safeguarded the Tzohar as a sacred state asset. Such objects historically passed only through the hands of powerful people —and never commerce — until moments like this.
6. Assets of This Nature Are Seldom “For Sale” — and when they are, suddenly they are gone
For sovereign wealth funds and major institutions, owning the Tzohar qualifies as an “unprecedented endowment asset” — comparable to owning a piece of 300-plus Kingdoms and nations of world history, but in singular. The most valuable artifacts in history were not marketed; they were quietly transferred between rulers, empires, and institutions. This offering represents a narrow, closing window that serious buyers recognize immediately.
7. Global Brand Equity: A Status That Cannot Be Replicated
Owning the Tzohar creates “global brand recognition” for its owner and possible institutions or sponsors. Anyone can buy art, land, or companies. Only one entity can buy the Tzohar — and that distinction alone reshapes how the world perceives the owner.
8. Multifaith Global Relevance
The Tzohar is the only physical piece in world history that occupies a shared origin narrative between Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. That convergence gives it an unmatched cultural gravity and makes its ownership globally consequential, not regional. Owning an object embedded in the earliest known historical traditions is a rare leveraging point for cultural influence.
9. Monumental Provenance Amplified by Market Awareness
Elite buyers understand that once an asset like this enters institutional or sovereign hands, competitive bidding becomes impossible. The moment of decision is always shorter than expected. Even when the Tzohar was misattributed by Sotheby’s New York in 1995, and Sotheby's claimed it was owned by 12 Kings and valued in November 1995 at $250 million USD, the Tzohar still stood above the rest.
10. Historically Reserved for Power, Not Private Individuals: Transformational Display Potential
Tradition has placed the Tzohar in Royal, Priestly, and State stewardship across eras. The fact that this private acquisition is even possible now is an exception created by time and the racist treatment from Sotheby’s towards the Owner, upon realizing the owner's skin was of color, not precedent.
11. A Centerpiece That Redefines Any Collection or Nation
Museums are built around objects like this, not the other way around. The Tzohar would instantly eclipse surrounding collections and redefine the institution or nation that holds it. Billionaires and family offices differentiate their collections — the Tzohar is positioned at the absolute apex of collectible value.
12. Authority Over Rational Debate
Regardless of academic position, objects tied to humanity’s earliest narratives command emotional Authority. That Authority translates into attention, reverence, and influence — indefinitely. Nations or heads of state could use ownership or display as a “soft power tool” in diplomacy.
13. Intellectual Legacy: A Once-in-Civilization Opportunity
No comparable artifact has surfaced in modern history with claims of this magnitude and continuity. Buyers who miss moments like this are studied later — not remembered as participants. Owning and opening access to scholars could make the owner a patron of “new global knowledge,” — solidifying their place in academic history.
14. Permanent Legacy Naming Rights: Sovereign-Level Symbolism
Nations spend billions projecting influence; artifacts like the Tzohar achieve it silently. Cultural authority outlasts political cycles, regimes, and borders. Naming rights for exhibits, research institutes, or foundations tied to the Tzohar could outlast any individual's lifetime.
15. Cultural Reinforcement Across Religions
Genesis is the foundation of multiple religions, and the Tzohar uniquely positions itself as a “bridge cultural divides” in ways that typical art can’t. Elite decision-makers consistently cite missed acquisitions as their greatest regret. This is the kind of asset that future leaders ask, “Why didn’t we act?”
16. Strategic Philanthropy Magnet
Charitable foundations could leverage the Tzohar to “underwrite global interfaith initiatives,” and secure significant philanthropic capital. The price reflects access, not worth. Once absorbed into a sovereign, royal, or institutional narrative, valuation becomes irrelevant — because it can no longer be measured.
17. Unbounded Interpretive Value
Because its narrative mixes archaeology, theology, and myth, there’s perpetual scholarly and public interest — the discovery or acquisition of the Tzohar is no doubt a perpetual newsmaker. Those who do not own the Tzohar will debate it. The one who does will define its narrative, scholarship, and global presence forever.
18. Potential for Significant Revaluation
With multiple legitimate scientific authentications published on our website for the entire world to see. The Tzohar is no fraud; it advances in dating, provenance, forensics, and materials — “could exponentially increase value even further” relative to its sale.
19. Time Is Quietly Working Against the Buyer
History remembers rulers not for what they owned, but for what they safeguarded. The Tzohar fits perfectly into this category of eternal custodianship. Every inquiry increases the likelihood of a decisive acquisition elsewhere. Serious buyers know silence often precedes irreversible action.
20. Portfolio Diversification With Non-Correlated Assets
Unlike stocks or real estate, cultural artifacts have low correlation with traditional markets — a strategic hedge for the ultra-wealthy portfolios.
21. Enduring Icon of Human Civilization
More than an art object or relic, the Tzohar is marketed as the Icon of all Icons; it is a symbol of human origin, enlightenment, and shared cultural heritage — unmatched in conceptual impact for eternity.
22. If You Are Capable of Buying It, You Are Meant to Decide Now
Here is why? Assets at this level do not wait for consensus. They respond to conviction — and once that conviction is exercised, the opportunity closes itself forever.
23. A Permanent Global Pilgrimage That Never Diminishes
If the Tzohar should be placed in a museum or national collection, the Tzohar would generate an unending global visitation, drawing scholars, pilgrims, heads of state, and many other faithful religious people from Christianity, Judaism, and Islam on every continent. Objects tied to humanity’s origin narrative do not experience visitor decline — they become destinations for centuries, transforming the host country or institution into a permanent focal point of world attention forever.
24. Custodianship Traditions Linked to the Most Powerful Names in History
Recorded past owners and inscriptional narratives of the Tzohar include people such as Adam and Eve, Seth, Jared, Enoch, Methuselah, Lemach, Noah, Joseph, Several of the Egyptian Demon gods such as Anubis, Apep, Seth, Wepwawet, Apis, evidence was found that also supports the claim that the Tzohar was also owned by the first Egyptian Pharaoh Menes, Abraham, Moses, Joshua, Samuel, King Saul, King David, King Solomon, King Rehoboam, King Zedekiah, King Nebuchadnezzar II the Great King of Babylon, King Darius, Daniel, King Cyrus the Great, the Prophets Ezra, Nemiah, Haggai, John the Baptist, each historically linked to sacred stewardship rather than ownership in the modern sense. Most strikingly, on the reverse of the Tzohar is described as being the largest hidden image on the Tzohar, which represents an ancient drawing of the crucifixion and the resurrection of Jesus Christ, signifying that the King of Kings was also a previous owner of the Tzohar. The Tzohar is claimed to have been owned by over 300 Kings and World Leaders. This is why it was not seen in public for centuries. As the general public has no access to Kings possessions. This information elevates the Tzohar artifact far beyond any one monarchy into theological supremacy — a distinction no other object in the history of the world, both past and present, can claim.
25. Royal Lineage Through the British Crown — Released Only Once
Custodial history places the Tzohar within the British Royal Family, beginning in the 1600s under King James VI and I, and maintained continuous ownership across the British Monarchs for over 300 years, owned by British Monarchs as a protected Royal relic. Its emergence from the British Royal custody during the reign of Queen Elizabeth II marks an extraordinary, and likely unrepeatable transition from the crown stewardship to public availability — a moment that serious buyers recognize as historically fleeting. This is truly a once-in-a-civilization acquisition opportunity.
26. Chronological Ledger Gold Mine
The Tzohar also served as chronological ledger used by over 1,000 Kings and World leaders several of which were done simultaneous between an allied union of dynasties. These ledgers are believed to hold a global financial registry and physical system long forgotten that is still in place today. The engravings on the the Tzohar are more than just designs, they are actual global landmarks which are belied hold the destination points of many underground bunkers established by past Kings and World leaders as the World's first World Banking system exclusively for Kings and World Leaders. The Land markings on the ground most were deliberately carved or surveyed from over above and are only visible from above which were put in place by many Kings on every continent of the World and all navigational maps have one access card, which all were found to be drawn the Tzohar.
27. World's Oldest Air Traffic Control & Lighthouse
The Tzohar also functioned during the BC era and early AD era as the oldest form of air traffic control. A designated controller would stand up high in a tower or on a mountain and direct incoming persons at night anr at day time at a lower visibility to their intended bunker location when Kings and other World Leaders were ready to make withdrawals or deposits in their World Bank exclusively for Kings and World Leaders.
28. Instant Net Worth Booster
Purchasing the Tzohar is also a great way to increase the networth of a individual, a country, financial institution, university or private entity. The Tzohar was recently appraised at $150 Billion US Dollars and we are considering offers. See our contact us page to submit offers, or get intouch with one of our representatives vias email or our CEO Joshua Darling.
29. Sustainable value
Unlike fiat currency or crypto and other precious metals that lose value over time, the Tzohar is not a commodity item, and would never lose value over any lifetime period. The Tzohar acts as a worldwide global sovereignty artifact in its provenance it was once owned by over 1,000 Kings and World Leaders, in addition to its many other functions still usable to date.
30. A National Security Risk - Disclaimer
It is possible that a qualified purchaser of the Tzohar can use the many geographical navigational functions of the Tzohar to locate and obtained all of the remaining treasures believed to be forgotten in underground bunkers by leaders of the past on every continent worldwide.
31. Pokemon existed
32. Dragon Ball Z characters existed
33. Yu-Gi-Oh: King Of Games existed
34. Tzohar Reserve communication
35. Tzohar Time capsule
The Tzohar can still be used as a silent form of a in plain sight time capsule, an old yet still effective way to place high level encrypted information one may not want other persons in this time period to find out and reserve it specifically for persons in the future.
36. Museum Attraction
Should the Tzohar be placed in a museum, it would draw visitors worldwide whether Christians, Muslims, Judaism, and others as well as many non religious people would want to see the Tzohar in person inside a museum.
37. Tzohar future Archaeological Discoveries
Purchasing the Tzohar and studying it would definitely lead to many more archaeological discoveries which many never be found worldwide without it.
38. Excavations in Iraq and Turkey
Purchasing the Tzohar can possibly lead to additional future excavations of the Zagros mountains in Iraq as well as the remains of the Ark said to have been found in Turkey.
39. Tzohar Preservation
The Tzohar is the oldest and most valued portable items of all time. It is believed to be between 360 to 480 million years old and onced owned by over 1,000 Kings including the King of Kings Jesus Christ and is not classified nor valued no longer as a stone or a commodity item but a chronological ledger of all these Kings and World Leaders of the past. It is considered a sovereign heritage ancient artifact which should be preserved for future generations of the world.





