Nimrod is defined as a Leopard , the Septuagint preserves the more ancient pronunciation of Νεβρωδ from ברד (barod) "Spotted" , although the word can describe any spotted animal, like a Panther (Πάρδος) or a Fawn (Νεβρώς). Dionysus is depicted wearing a spotted-skin, either a Fawn, Panther or Leopard.
The spots of the Leopard reassemble Roses and this word developed from ϝρόδον or βρόδον (Brodon) also written ῥόδον (Rhodes) and called Αβρά βρόδον(חבר ברתיו) in Jer 13:23 and there is a River called Barada in Syria, the Leopard-River(Jer 38:34) sourced from mountain of Leopards (Songs 4:8).
Coat of many spots (χιτῶνα ποικίλον - כתנת פסים) is the Garment worn by Joseph and the word ποικίλον is a translation of Shinar (Gen 10:9) in Joshua 7:21 "Byblos Garment".
This is relevant too the Epics of Gilgamesh since it mentions the very region Nimrod is assigned too. Lebanon.
The Epic of Gilgamesh mentions that Mount Hermon split after Gilgamesh killed Humbaba, the Guardian of the Cedar Forest. One translation of Tablet V states, "The ground split open with the heels of their feet, as they whirled around in circles Mt. Hermon and Lebanon split.
Humbaba - Guardian of the Cedar Forest,
he iconography of the apotropaic severed head of Humbaba, with staring eyes, flowing beard and wild hair, is well documented from the First Babylonian Dynasty, continuing into Neo-Assyrian art and dying away during the Achaemenid rule. The severed head of the monstrous Humbaba found a Greek parallel in the myth of Perseus[10] and the similarly employed head of Medusa, which Perseus placed in his leather sack.[11] Archaic Greek depictions of the gorgoneion render it bearded, an anomaly in the female Gorgon.
Hermes, the name-sake of Mount Hermon, is the only God in Greek mythology not depicted with a body, only an apotropaic bearded severed? head and a phallus.
