Friday, August 19, 2016

The Pharaoh of the Exodus is recognized as King Dudimose

history channel documentary 2015 Antiquarians of the 300 BC time, Eusebies and Artapanus, with old records from the library at Alexandria, recount Mouses {Moses}, an Egyptian ruler who drove a military battle against Ethiopia. The Roman student of history, Josephus and a stela section in the British Museum, show such an occasion happened amid the rule of Pharaoh Khenepres-Sobekhotep. Additionally supporting the tale of the military battle by Moses was a statue of Sobekhotep {Moses' stepfather} found on the island of Argo, demonstrating that Egyptian triumph and power stretched out to 200 kilometers from Egypt. Egyptian history specialists composed that Mouses' popularity made Sobekhotep target him {causing him to escape from Egypt to Midian - as in the Bible story, in any case, the Bible and the Jewish Haggadah say the cause was Moses executing an Egyptian slave-driver who was beating a Hebrew};

The Pharaoh of the Exodus is recognized as King Dudimose, 36th leader of the thirteenth Dynasty. {The Bible portrays him as, "Pharaoh who knew not Joseph"}. M. Bietek, in his burrow at Tel ed-Baba, which he dated to the center of the fourteenth Dynasty, discovered shallow mass graves everywhere throughout the city of Avaris - clear proof of some sort of sudden major and boundless calamity {not dissimilar to what might come about because of a scriptural "Tenth Plague", demise of all first-born}. Moreover, site-prehistoric studies proposes that the rest of the populace had surrendered their homes rapidly and as once huge mob; Data from the additional scriptural wellspring of Josephus, a Roman student of history conceived a Jew - who supported Titus in his victory of Jerusalem in 67 AD, and was then, as a prize, given the Temple Scrolls - cites Monetho, an Egyptian cleric, around 300 BC, with respect to the "simple" triumph of relentless Egypt by the Hyksos. {Bible - Egypt's loss of its whole armed force of 600 chariots and charioteers at the Red Sea appears a sensible explanation}.

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