Nadene Goldfoot
Our Old Testament, which we Jews call the Torah which are the first 5 books of it, or the Tanakh, which includes what Christians call the Old Testament, tells of Abraham leaving his city of Ur on the Euphrates River and goes to Canaan and Egypt.
Simcha Jacobovitchi figures that the 40 year long Exodus happened in about 1500 BCE, which he also connects the Hyskos on their migration. I found that our Jewish history had Moses born in 1391BCE and dying at age 120 in 1271 BCE, which fits all the other events of our Jewish history so well. Simcha has done a video explaining all his discovery that is a clincher.
Pharaoh Ahmose: Egyptians hold in high esteem the two pharaohs who unified their country: the Old Kingdom pharaoh Narmer of around 3100 B.C., and Ahmose I (unknown—1525 B.C.), who reunited a divided Egypt around 1550 B.C. and ushered in the celebrated New Kingdom. I just can't understand why it's taken so long to decide on Ahmose being the pharaoh with his connection to the Hyksos !When young Ahmose I ascended the throne, Egypt was in tremendous turmoil. Intruders of Asiatic origin known as the Hyksos, meaning “rulers of foreign lands,” had taken control of the Nile Delta. They had savagely murdered Pharaoh Seqenenre Tao, Ahmose’s father, and decimated the army. They demanded tribute from the rulers of Upper Egypt in Thebes and took their princesses as wives. The barbarism of the Hyksos was memorialized by Egyptian historian Manetho. “[They] burned our cities ruthlessly, razed to the ground the temples of our gods, and treated all the natives with a cruel hostility.” (Discover how three rebel queens in Egypt helped expel the Hyksos.) This is why Abraham wanted to get out of Ur, possibly. After all, the city was into human sacrifices. Abraham must have figured that Egypt would have nicer people.
Resuming the war of liberation against the Hyksos early in his reign, Ahmose crushed the foreigners’ allies in Middle Egypt and, advancing down the Nile River, captured Memphis, the traditional capital of Egypt, near present-day Cairo. While his mother, Queen Ahhotep, acted as his representative in Thebes (partially occupied by modern Luxor), he undertook a waterborne operation against Avaris, the Hyksos capital, in the eastern delta, followed by a land siege. When a rebellion flared in Upper Egypt, he hastened upriver to quell the rising, while Ahhotep helped to contain it. Having put down the rising, he captured Avaris and then pursued the enemy to Sharuhen, [Sharuhen (Hebrew: שָׁרוּחֶן) was an ancient town in the Negev Desert or perhaps in Gaza].a Hyksos stronghold in Palestine, which was reduced after a three-year siege.
City of Avaris in 1550 BCEIt was his much younger brother, Ahmose I, however, who finally succeeded in capturing Avaris, razing it, and expelling the Hyksos rulers from Egypt altogether. Avaris was the capital of Egypt under the Hyksos. The name in the Egyptian language of the 2nd millennium BC was probably pronounced *Ḥaʔat-Wūrat 'Great House' and denotes the capital of an administrative division of the land. Uploaded by Anatoli Grimalschi.
The profound insult of the foreign rule to the honour and integrity of Egypt could be corrected, and its recurrence prevented, only by extending Egypt's hegemony over the Asiatics to the north and east of Egypt. Ahmose I engaged in a retaliative three-year siege of Sharuhen, thereby launching an aggressive policy of pre-emptive warfare. The town fell soon after the siege, ending the power of the Hyksos. 193–4 His victories were maintained by his son, Amenhotep I, then continued by Amenhotep's successor Thutmose I, who extended Egyptian influence as far as the Mitanni kingdom in the north and Mesopotamia in the east, pushing the borders of the Egyptian empire farther than ever before.
Sharuhen is mentioned in the bible in Joshua 19:6 in the description of the allotment of the Tribe of Simeon.
It could be that Abraham had heard of the earlier migrations of the Hyksos, and now he knew there was a route and a place to go to where his family could thrive.
Our Torah never named the pharaoh involved in our history with Moses, but Simcha has found evidence of it being Ahmose, which figures nicely with the names.
Resource:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Exodus_Decoded
https://www.jpost.com/arts-and-culture/arts/naked-archeologist-simcha-jacobovici-wins-docu-tv-award-at-cannes-329265
Book: Ur "Of The Chaldees" by PRS Moorey about Sir Leonard Woolley's Excavations at Ur
https://www.britannica.com/place/Ur
https://www.britannica.com/biography/Ahmose-I
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avaris
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sharuhen#:~:text=Sharuhen%20(Hebrew%3A%20%D7%A9%D6%B8%D7%81%D7%A8%D7%95%D6%BC%D7%97%D6%B6%D7%9F)%20was,Desert%20or%20perhaps%20in%20Gaza.
https://www.pinterest.cl/pin/296674694184414341/
No comments:
Post a Comment