A related school of thought is the Bible-Babel school, which regarded the
Hebrew Bible and
Judaism to be directly derived from
Mesopotamian (Babylonian) mythology; both are forms of
hyperdiffusionism in archaeology. Both theories were popular in Germany, and Panbabylonism remained popular from the late 19th century to
World War I. Prominent advocates included
Friedrich Delitzsch,
Peter Jensen,
Alfred Jeremias and
Hugo Winckler. Panbabylonist thought largely disappeared from legitimate scholarship after the death of one of its greatest proponents,
Hugo Winckler. '' on a
cuneiform tablet in the
British Museum ==See also==