Let's leave it at this, it's evident that you and I have an issue communicating. For whatever reason you can't grasp what I'm actually saying, and apparently from your expressions nor I you.
Therefore it is best we go our separate ways. You seem convinced you are right rather than interested in a discussion, and I'm not going to talk up to you. References won't matter really, as I would assume you have your own and believe them to be fact rather than theory since there is no way to be sure absolutely 100% what was going on that far back. But I can say I am very convinced when comparing the various cultures that the worship of the one God, which you are correct would have been called El, is much older than the gods that sprang up later. According to the bible, aside from the cultures, the God previousky known as El Shaddai was not known by name until he revealed it, giving him a distinction that didn't preciously exist because el is not a name it's a title.
He had no reason to provide a distinction previously, as he was the only one called God. From what I have read in two of the books I have currently, this seems most likely.
Having said that, I'll leave you to your own beliefs about it, and I apologize for getting somewhat heated. It is frustrating to me when I am being misunderstood and it appears that isn't going to change in this instance. I will also say I am willing to acquire any reference you think I should read from which you have built your position and read it myself. but I am now going to step away from this thread and only check it for any reference you believe I should read.
Pas to my own referenced I have one trustworthy and one not as much. "The first is the Oxford history of the biblical world" which I confess only being half through. The second is a copy of the two Babylons by Alexander hislop. The second isn't quit as trustworthy, and the entire book is about attacking the Catholic Church. However: in doing so he does site a lot of good points using sound historical sources such as Eusebius and many others which I took the time to verify myself - and he uses these to show the origins of the idolatrous world around Melchizadek. If you check this book however, I can't stress enough how important it is to check his sources, because over half of his book is complete garbage, but the first half is full of bery sound, referenced, observances of the ancient world.
The former book, which is far more reliable and much larger, includes a great deal of information about el which, whether they noticed or not, matches the book of Enochs discription of the ancient world very well. The book explains that El Shadday is better translated as the mountain one, and the el was the father of the pantheon made around him. You may not have read Enoch I'm not sure, but according to that book, Angels were sent to teach mankind early technologies and these Angels settled on a mountain from which they came to teach. It was these Angels who began to mingle with human women and teach things they weren't supposed to and ended up imprisoned for their deeds and precipitating events tat lead to the flood.
So from what I've read of the God El, it fits fully with the ancient manuscripts depictions of the God who was yahweh. Also, this book shows that el came first, he is called the father of the other gods in the pantheon according to the ancient texts. There were evidently some who felt this worship of the others were wrong however, and they stuck to the one God. From these who worshipped the one God you find men such as Melchizadek, who only worshipped Elshaddai (the God of the mountain) while the others around him took to worshipping the entire pantheon developed around this God. And according to Gensis, abraham claimed this god as his, and as soon as he left his idolatrous home land he sought out Melchizadek, the priest of the one God.
This history, and the sources referenced in the book as the ancient sources, demonstrate el was the first God to be worshipped. And only later was a pantheon created around him by the people of the ancient world.