Moses and the Exodus: what evidence?
Abstract. To be or not to be is a crucial question regarding Moses as well as the Exodus because,
according to the Bible, the character related to that famous event forms the basis of the Passover which
meant the Promised Land for Jews and later the Paradise for Christians. However, according to most
Egyptologists, there is absolutely no evidence of Moses and the Exodus in Egyptian documents, which leads
them to conclude that the whole biblical story is a myth written for gullible people. Ironically, if one considers
that “truth” must be based on two pillars: an accurate chronology anchored on absolute dates (Herodotus’
principle) and reliable documents coming from critical editions (Thucydides’ principle), that implies an
amazing conclusion: those who believe Egyptologists are actually the real gullible ones. According to
Egyptian accounts the last king of the XVth dynasty, named Apopi, “very pretty” in Hebrew that is
Moses’ birth name (Ex 2:2), reigned 40 years in Egypt from 1613 to 1573 BCE, then 40 years later he
met Seqenenre Taa the last pharaoh of the XVIIth dynasty and gave him an unspecified disturbing message.
The eldest son of Seqenenre Taa, Ahmose Sapaïr, who was crown prince died in a dramatic and
unexplained way shortly before his father. Seqenenre Taa died in May 1533 BCE, after 11 years of reign,
in dramatic and unclear circumstances. The state of his mummy proves, however, that his body received
severe injuries, in agreement with Psalms 136:15, and remained abandoned for several days before being
mummified. Prince Kamose, Seqenenre Taa's brother, assured interim of authority for 3 years and
threatened attack the former pharaoh Apopi, new prince of Retenu (Palestine) who took the name Moses,
according to Manetho (280 BCE), an Egyptian priest and historian. In the stele of the Tempest, Kamose
also blames Apopi for all the disasters that come to fall upon Egypt, which caused many deaths.
Before answering the question “what evidence of Moses’ existence”, it is necessary
to define what is evidence. For example “did Jesus exist?” because most testimonies come
from the New Testament, a religious book. Some atheists refuse to take into account the
Bible because that book states clearly the existence of God as well as miracles. However, in
my opinion, searching the truth must be the fundamental purpose of any honest historian.
“What is truth” Pilate said to Jesus (Jn 18:38). For honest and scientific historians, “truth”
is based on two main pillars: 1) an accurate chronology anchored on absolute dates
(Herodotus’ principle) and 2) reliable documents coming from critical editions
(Thucydides’ principle). If we apply these two principles, Jesus existed because he died on
Friday 3 April 33 CE around 3 hours before a moon eclipse (Ac 2:20) and the Jews who
put him to death have never denied even his claim to be the Messiah (BT Sanhedrin 43a).
The existence of Moses, and consequently the Exodus, began to be challenged
when Egyptologists began publishing articles, mainly from 19801, to prove that the text of
the Old Testament should be considered without historical value. It is to be noted that the
more these academics are close to political power (which is today in France proudly atheist)
the more their attacks (in French) against the Bible are virulent and ideological:
It is absurd on the one hand, taking the biblical text for a historical document, on the other hand
reversing the importance of protagonists: Israel is mentioned only once on a stele of Merneptah while the
word Egypt is used 680 times in the Bible (...) The references to Egypt in the Bible are mainly used to
feed the internal history of the Hebrews, giving a vague backdrop for some episodes, and are unrelated
with current history teaching2. Christiane Desroches Noblecourt (1913-2011), was an
Egyptologist, Emeritus Chief Curator of Egyptian Antiquities (Louvre) and former
professor of archaeology at the Ecole du Louvre.
J.K. HOFFMEIER – Israel in Egypt. The Evidence for the Authenticity of the Exodus Tradition
New York 1996 Ed. Oxford University Press pp. 3-5.
2 C. DESROCHES NOBLECOURT - Symboles de l'Égypte
Paris 2004 Éd. Desclée de Brouwer pp. 125-126.
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SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
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THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
As the history of unclean ones is devoid of any historical basis it is difficult to agree with Manetho and
Josephus that the forcibly expelling from Avaris by Pharaoh and his congeners is the same event as the
liberation of the Hebrews taken out by Moses with God's help ... The gross invention of Egyptian
scribes, worthy of the trashcan, can not remain in the folder of historians of Bible times (...) The
apologetical travesty imagined by Josephus is not better than the libelous travesty of the Egyptian priest3.
Jean Yoyotte (1927-2009) was an Egyptologist, Chairholder of Egyptology at the
Collège de France and director of studies at the Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes.
In general, no serious archaeologist believes today that the events described in the Book of Joshua have
any accurate historical basis. Archaeological surveys in the early 1990s, in particular, showed that the
Israelite culture emerged in the central hills of the country, in continuity with the Canaanite culture of
the previous period4. Pierre de Miroschedji, archaeologist, director of research at CNRS.
The departure from Egypt, known as the Exodus, is an essential vicissitude of this story [Exodus
13:14] (...) We almost forget one fundamental fact: nothing in the present state of Egyptian literature,
more or less contemporary with these events, confirms this story, or even alluded, only fleetingly, to one of
the episodes where some characters are mentioned. Nothing!5 Alain Zivie, Egyptologist, Director
of Research at Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique.
Most historians take the biblical text of the conquest of Canaan for a pious legend, a reinterpretation of
ideological and theological origins of Israel (...) These cities are, according to the Bible, heavily fortified.
But archaeological excavations reveal otherwise. So today, excavations of Canaanite cities and reading of
tablets from Tell el-Amarna showed that the victories of Joshua took place only on paper. To conclude:
“There has been no mass exodus from Egypt. Canaan was not conquered by violence6.” Richard
Lebeau, Egyptologist, historian of religions in the ancient Near East.
Modern archaeology has shown that the concept of archives kept in Jerusalem with writings of the tenth
century, is an absurdity based on a biblical witness and not on factual evidence. Bible stories would rank
therefore among national mythologies, and would have no more historical foundation than the Homeric
saga of Ulysses, or that of Aeneas, founder of Rome, sung by Virgil7. Israel Finkelstein, Israeli
archaeologist, Director of the Institute of Archaeology of Tel Aviv University, author of
the famous book The Bible Unearthed.
How should ultimately consider the source that is the biblical text to serve as a gateway for talking
about people of the Bible? (...) There are so many layers of myths, they should not be taken for historical
narratives. The Exodus, episode presented in college history books as a real historic event, provides a
good illustration. According to the Bible (...) this is the long journey of the Hebrews from Egypt and
Canaan which is called the Exodus. However, it is highly unlikely that such an event ever took place.
The first reason to doubt results from the considerable chronological gap between the time of writing from
books that mention it and the supposed date of the event, clearly located in a mythical past. The second
reason is the absence of any explicit data in the biblical text to place Exodus in time and to follow it in
space, so the name of the Pharaoh is not given. The third reason is the silence of the Egyptian sources.
A final argument is the absence of any reference to the Exodus in the oldest strata of the Bible8.
J. YOYOTTE – En Égypte, le faux mystère des dynasties hyksos
in: Le monde de la Bible n°146 (novembre 2002) pp. 44-45.
4 P. DE MIROSCHEDJI – Les archéologues réécrivent la Bible
in: La Recherche n°391 (novembre 2005) p. 32.
5 A. ZIVIE – Les Hébreux en Egypte: réalités et fantasmes
in: Historia n°698 (février 2005) p. 59.
6 R. LEBEAU – La Terre promise était acquise
in: Historia n°698 (février 2005) pp. 64, 65.
R. LEBEAU – L'Exode une fiction théologique
in: Histoire Antique n°41 (février 2009) p. 79.
7 I. FINKELSTEIN – Le grand roi? Rien qu'un potentat local
in: Historia n°698 (février 2005) p. 73.
I. FINKELSTEIN, N.A. SILBERMAN - La Bible dévoilée
Paris 2002 Éd. Bayard pp. 51-53.
8 C. ROBIN – Les peuples de la Bible quelle(s) lecture(s) ?
in: Les Cahiers de Science&Vie n°89 (octobre 2005) pp. 6-8.
3
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
Christian Robin, Director of the Laboratory of ancient Semitic Studies (Collège de
France Paris IV Sorbonne), member of the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres.
The biblical writers and editors had some genuine sources, but they did not hesitate to manipulate them.
They did this not only with exaggerations and embellishments, but also with additions and even outright
inventions, in order to make the stories serve their own ideological agenda. In this regard, they were like
most ancient historians. Nevertheless, they still need not be regarded as charlatans, even though their
view of history was naive. They, too, thought that they were telling the operative truth — that is, they
were simply writing well-intentioned propaganda. This may be called “historicized myth,” and that is
how much of modem, liberal, critical scholarship regards the Hebrew Bible. Nevertheless, even
propaganda and myth, like caricature, must necessarily contain some objective truths, lest they be
completely unbelievable and thus ineffective (...) Rather than attempt to defend the factual historicity of
the Exodus traditions, I suggest that we must understand the Exodus story precisely as a myth,
specifically as a “metaphor for liberation”. William G. Dever, American archaeologist
(University of Arizona), specialist and defender (sic) of the history of biblical Israel9.
Stories and history (...) It would be absurd requesting the rigor that would use a modern historian (...),
although we can not specify the contours in the mythical garment that has been given, in accordance with
the mentality of the time and the environment (...) For the date of the Exodus, we can not rely on
chronological indications of 1 K 6:1 and Jg 11:26, which are secondary and derived from artificial
computations (...) Certainly neither the apostles nor other evangelical preachers and storytellers have tried
to make « history » in the technical sense of the word, their purpose was less profane and more
theological. Jerusalem Bible (Paris 1986 Ed. Cerf pp. 27, 1410), which is the official Bible
of the Catholic world.
An objective reader should note that most reasons put forward by these prestigious
scholars are ideological, not based on any verifiable factual data: absurd, no serious archaeologist
believes that the events described in the book of Joshua; worthy of the trashcan, fundamental fact: nothing,
pious legend, there was no mass exodus from Egypt; nonsense based on a biblical witness; very type of myth,
history does not support the amazing and miraculous story of Exodus, etc. Some of these scholars, in
order to prove their claims, quote the work of the archaeologist Finkelstein explaining10:
The main problem was that the scholars who accepted the biblical accounts as reliable mistakenly believed
that the patriarchal age must be seen, one way or the other, as the earliest phase in a sequential history of
Israel. Some Telltale Anachronisms: The critical textual scholars who had identified distinct sources
underlying the text of Genesis insisted that the patriarchal narratives were put into writing at a relatively
late date, at the time of the monarchy (tenth-eighth centuries BCE) or even later, in exilic and post-exilic
days (sixth-fifth centuries BCE). The German biblical scholar Julius Wellhausen argued that the stories of
the patriarchs in both the J and E documents reflected the concerns of the later Israelite monarchy, which
were projected onto the lives of legendary fathers in a largely mythical past. The biblical stories should thus
be regarded as a national mythology with no more historical basis than the Homeric saga of Odysseuss
travels or Virgil's saga of Aeneas's founding of Rome. In more recent decades, the American biblical
scholars John Van Seters and Thomas Thompson further challenged the supposed archaeological evidence
for the historical patriarchs in the second millennium BCE. They argued that even if the later texts contained
some early traditions, the selection and arrangement of stories expressed a clear message by the biblical
editors at the time of compilation, rather than preserving a reliable historical account. But when did that
compilation take place? The biblical text reveals some clear clues that can narrow down the time of its final
composition. Take the repeated mention of camels, for instance. The stories of the patriarchs are packed
with camels, usually herds of camels; but as in the story of Joseph's sale by his brothers into slavery (Gn
37:25), camels are also described as beasts of burden used in caravan trade. We now know through
W.G. DEVER – Who Were the Early Israelites and Where Did They Come From?
Grand Rapids 2003 Ed. Eerdmans Publishing pp. 226,233.
10 I. FINKELSTEIN, N.A. SILBERMAN -The Bible Unearthed: Archaeology's New Vision of Ancient Isreal and the Origin of Sacred Texts
New York 2001 Ed. The Free Press pp. 36-38.
9
3
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
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THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
archaeological research that camels were not domesticated as beasts of burden earlier than the late second
millennium and were not widely used in that capacity in the ancient Near East until well after 1000 BCE.
And an even more telling detail —the camel caravan carrying "gum, balm, and myrrh," in the Joseph
story— reveals an obvious familiarity with the main products of the lucrative Arabian trade that flourished
under the supervision of the Assyrian empire in the eighth-seventh centuries BCE. Then there is the issue of
the Philistines. We hear of them in connection with Isaac's encounter with "Abimelech, king of the
Philistines," at the city of Gerar (Gn 26:1). The Philistines, a group of migrants from the Aegean or
eastern Mediterranean, had not established their settlements along the coastal plain of Canaan until
sometime after 1200 BCE. Their cities prospered in the eleventh and tenth centuries and continued to
dominate the area well into the Assyrian period. The mention of Gerar as a Philistine city in the narratives
of Isaac and the mention of the city (without the Philistine attribution) in the stories of Abraham (Gn
20:1) suggest that it had a special importance or at least was widely known at the time of the composition of
the patriarchal narratives. Gerar is today identified with Tel Haror northwest of Beersheba, and
excavations there have shown that in the Iron Age I —the early phase of Philistine history— it was no
more than a small, quite insignificant village. But by the late eighth and seventh century BCE, it had
become a strong, heavily fortified Assyrian administrative stronghold in the south, an obvious landmark.
Were these incongruous details merely late insertions into early traditions or were they indications that both
the details and the narrative were late? Many scholars —particularly those who supported the idea of the
"historical" patriarchs —considered them to be incidental details. But as Thomas Thompson put it as early
as the 1970s, the specific references in the text to cities, neighbouring peoples, and familiar places are
precisely those aspects that distinguish the patriarchal stories from completely mythical folk-tales. They are
crucially important for identifying the date and message of the text. In other words, the "anachronisms" are
far more important for dating and understanding the meaning and historical context of the stories of the
patriarchs than the search for ancient Bedouin or mathematical calculations of the patriarchs' ages and
genealogies. So the combination of camels, Arabian goods, Philistines, and Gerar—as well as other places
and nations mentioned in the patriarchal stories in Genesis —are highly significant. All the clues point to a
time of composition many centuries after the time in which the Bible reports the lives of the patriarchs took
place. These and other anachronisms suggest an intensive period of writing the patriarchal narratives in the
eighth and seventh centuries BCE. According to Finkelstein, Moses had little or nothing to do
with the writing of the book of the Pentateuch.
Critics of Finkelstein against the Pentateuch are all based on an absence of evidence
that would be evidence of the absence and his statement that, according to the
documentary hypothesis, there would never have been any biblical writing in the time of
Moses is simply false. The Amarna letters (on clay tablets in cuneiform), which are mostly
diplomatic correspondence between the Egyptian administration and its representatives in
Canaan and Amurru (dated 14th century BCE) have shown that the scribes of Canaan knew
writing because these letters are written primarily in Akkadian (in fact Babylonian
Standard), the regional language of diplomacy for this period, with marginal notes in
Ancient Canaanite, their mother tongue. For archaeologists, Moses could not have written
the Pentateuch because the paleo-Hebrew only appeared after circa 1050 BCE11, at Byblos,
and scribal schools in Palestine only began to exist circa 800 BCE12. According to
Finkelstein13: Modern archaeology has shown that the concept of archives kept in Jerusalem with writings
of the tenth century, is an absurdity based on a biblical witness and not on factual evidence. Bible stories
J.F. HEALEY – Consolidation de l'alphabet et extension vers l'Ouest
in: La naissance des écritures du cunéifore à l'alphabet (Seuil, 1994), pp. 281-284.
12 D.W. JAMIESON-DRAKE – Scribes and Schools in Monarchic Judah: A Socio-Archeological Approach
Sheffiel 1991, Ed. Sheffield University Press pp. 11-47.
13 I. FINKELSTEIN – Le grand roi? Rien qu'un potentat local
in: Historia n°698 (février 2005) p. 73.
I. FINKELSTEIN, N.A. SILBERMAN - La Bible dévoilée
Paris 2002 Éd. Bayard pp. 51-53.
11
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
5
would rank therefore among national mythologies, and would have no more historical foundation that
Homeric saga of Ulysses, or that of Aeneas, founder of Rome, sung by Virgil. These statements and
these dates are historically grotesque since these authors are well aware that the Semites
who came from Egypt and lived in Palestine knew the old writing called proto-Canaanite14,
the ancestor of Old Hebrew. For example, several inscriptions in proto-Canaanite have
been discovered in Egypt (Serabit el-Khadim in Sinai and Wadi el-Ḥôl15 north of Thebes)
and in Palestine (Lachish, Gezer and Shechem). These inscriptions are difficult to date,
between 1850 and 1500 BCE for Serabit el-Khadim and 1600-1500 for those in Palestine.
The spelling of the name of Canaanite cities in execration texts16 (dated c. 1950
17
BCE) , founded on shards and figurines, is variable18 but their meaning is clearly Hebrew:
City
I-s-q-3-i
M-‘-k-t-r-y
S-k-m-i-m
I-p-q-w-m
M-‘-š-i-3
i-3-ḥ-b-w-m
Ḥ-d-w-i-3-i
B-q-‘-t-m
-s-[ti]-3-t-m
Q-n-i
Asqalu[na]
M‘aktoley
Sekemim
Apeqûm
Ma‘shal
aRehobûm
Hadjûre
Beq‘atum
As[t]artum
Qena
Hebrew
Ashkalon
Migdol
Shechem
Aphek
Mishal
Rehob
Hazor
Beqa
‘Ashtaroth
Kanah
meaning
Migration?
Tower
Shoulder
Strength
Prayer
Open place
Castle
Valley
Ishtar(s)
Place of reed
City
I-p-w-m
D-w-3-w-y
M-k-ti
3w-w-š3-3-m-m
I-b-w-3-m
‘-3-q-t-m
Q-3-q-3-m
‘-q-3-i
b-w-t-š-m-š-w
‘-3-m-w
Apûm
Djûrûy
Meketa
[U]rûshalmum
Abûlum
‘Arqatum
Qarqarum
Aqere[n]
Bûtshemeshû
Aram-û
Hebrew
Hobah
Tyre
Megiddo
Jerusalem
Abel
Arqat
Qarqar
Ekron
Bet-Shemesh
Arameans
meaning
Hiding place
Rock
Place of troops
City completed
Meadow
Earth
Soft ground?
Eradication
House of Sun
High region
The oldest epigraph in paleo-Hebrew is dated 1550-148019. One has to notice
(below) that this latter example comes from a professional scribe who inscribed his name in
cuneiform: Ali-dîn-ili of Kup[patu?] (a-lí-di-in-ì-lí ša ku-up-[pa-tu? “high building”]) and engraved
it in paleo-Hebrew on the edge of the tablet
as: ’LDN’L GB‘ (Aldinel of Gaba “hill?”). This
paleo-Hebrew script is close to that yet much
later (c. 950 BCE) found at Tel Zayit20.
’
L
D
N
’
L
G
B
‘
From its discovery (in 2005) the Tel Zayit Abecedary served as evidence supporting
the notion of widespread literacy in ancient Israel during the 10th century21 for two reasons:
1) the increasing number of paleo-Hebrew inscriptions discovered in the period dated
1100-1000 BCE (at least 6) and 2) the regularity of writing of these inscriptions that is
possible only if there were schools of scribes22. Some schools of scribes had likely been
organized by King David because it is from his reign that appear king's secretaries23. David
himself was able to write a letter to Joab, his chief of the army (2Sa 11:14-15). Writing was
A. LEMAIRE – Les «Hyksos» et les débuts de l'écriture alphabétique au Proche-Orient
in: Des signes pictographiques à l'alphabet (Karthala, 2000) pp.103-133.
15 J. COLEMAN DARNELL, F.W. DOBBS-ALLSOPP, M.J. LUNDBERG, P. KYLE MCCARTER, B. ZUCKERMAN – Two Early Alphabetic
Inscriptions from the Wadi el-Ḥôl in: The Annual of the American Schools of Oriental Research 59 (2005), pp. 73-110.
16 R. DUSSEAUD – Nouveaux textes égyptiens d'éxécration contre les peuples syriens
in: Syria 21:2 (Persee, 1940) pp. 170-182.
17 They are transcribed with early Old Babylonian features, especially the mimation as the final m that appears on all singular, feminine
plural nouns and on the dative pronouns, was lost quite early in the Old Babylonian period, probably after the collapse of Ur.
18 The Egyptian letter "3" was frequently used, at that time, for rendering the Canaanite letters "l" or "r" (J. BRIEND, M.-J. SEUX – Textes
du Proche-Orient ancien et histoire d'Israël. Paris 1977 Éd. Cerf pp. 30-36).
19 S. DALLEY – Babylonian Tablets from the First Sealand Dynasty in the Schøyen Collection
in: Cornell University Studies in Assyriology and Sumerology Vol. 9 (CDL Press, 2009) pp. 1-16, 112, plates LIII, CLIIV.
20 L. COLONNA D'ISTRIA – Babylonian Tablets from the First Sealand Dynasty in the Schøyen Collection
in: Nouvelles Assyriologiques Brèves et Utilitaires N°3 (2012) pp. 61-63.
21 C.A. ROLLSTON – The Phoenician Script of the Tel Zayit Abecedary and Putative Evidence for Israelite Literacy
in: Literate Culture and Tenth-Century Canaan: The Tel Zayit Abecedary in Context (Eisenbrauns, 2008), pp. 61-96.
22 D.M. CARR – The Formation of the Hebrew Bible: A New Reconstruction
2011 Ed. Oxford University Press pp. 360-385.
23 As Shavsha (1Ch 18:16), Sherayah (2Sa 8:17), Shisha (1Ki 4:3), Sheva (2Sa 20:25), Elihoreph and Ahijah (1Ki 4:3).
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SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
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THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
so widespread at his time that King Solomon warns: As regards anything besides these, my son,
take a warning: To the making of many books there is no end, and much devotion [to them] is wearisome
to the flesh (Ec 12:12). The findings about schools of scribes during the 10th century are
interesting (but recent) as they show the stupidity of Finkelstein's claims, however these
paleographers continue teaching that the documents in paleo-Hebrew prior to 1100 BCE
did not exist and that the references to this writing at the time of Moses (Dt 31:24, Jos 1:8;
10:13) are not credible. However, as explained the Bible d'Alexandrie in its note on Judges
5:1424 which mentions some enumerator scribes, without such professional these major
censuses (as those quoted in Numbers 1:1-19, 20:2-63) would have been impossible to
perform. There were not only professional scribes who could write because even a young
man (anonymous) at the time of Gideon (1299-1259) was able to write 77 names (Jg 8:14).
Denigration of biblical texts by archaeologists is based primarily on the following
fallacy: "the current lack of archaeological evidence is evidence of the lack of historical evidence". It is
important to understand why this reasoning (mainly from 1970)25 is false because it is the
"cornerstone" of archaeologists whereas for historians today it is the testimony of early
historians. First, one must know that the complete disappearance of past things, including
some impressive buildings of stone, is the rule and not the exception, even the main capital
of the first empire of Akkad (Aggad) has still not been found. Major periods of history, like
the one that followed the attack of the Peoples of the Sea and lasted 400 years (1150-750)
are called "Dark Ages" because they are completely empty of written documents. The kings
of the Elamite empire, for example, "disappear" completely out of the history for more
than three centuries (1100-770) and although the Etruscan civilization is newer and has
prospered from 750 to 300 BCE we do not have any literature. Indeed, there is currently
no document datable from the period of the Judges (1500-1000) but it should be noted, by
way of comparison, that the famous Kassite dynasty, which also lasted five centuries (16501150), left no text and yet it was far more powerful than the Jewish jurisdiction. How can
one explain that a known writing could disappear for several centuries without leaving any
archaeological trace. For example, the Elamite cuneiform was used from 22nd to 4th
centuries BCE26 but its disappearance during the period 1100-770 BCE was caused by a
massive arrival of Indo-Aryan tribes which upset the Elamite empire leading to a relocation
of its capital at Susa27 (instead of Anshan). It is obvious that the Elamite writing did not
disappear but as chancelleries ceased to produce documents in large quantities, due to
disturbances in the empire, the number of documents of this period that have survived
today has decreased drastically to reach virtually zero (the proportion of contemporaneous
documents that are found is probably less than one in a thousand)28. For the same reasons
when the Babylonian empire was destroyed by the Hittites (in 1499 BCE) it was replaced
by a small provincial Kassite kingdom without Chancery, and therefore without written
documents (we know Kassite kings only through later Babylonian scribes). The appearance
of a writing is in fact closely linked to the activities of a Chancery. A second factor has
played a significant role (poorly known): the perishable nature (or not) of support.
Two well-known writings, Egyptian hieroglyph and Babylonian cuneiform, allow
one to understand the role of chancelleries and support of scriptures. The Babylonian
P. HARLÉ, T. ROQUEPLO – Bible d'Alexandrie LXX 7. Les Juges
Paris 1999 Éd. Cerf pp. 121-122.
25 P. COURBIN – Qu'est-ce que l'archéologie?
Paris 1982 Éd. Payot pp. 121-220.
26 F. GRILLOT-SUSINI – L'élamite. Éléments de grammaire
Paris 2008 Éd. Librairie Orientaliste Paul Geuthner p. 9.
27 F. JOANNÈS - Dictionnaire de la civilisation mésopotamienne
Paris 2001 Éd. Robert Laffont pp. 272-276.
28 Thus most ancient writers are not known anymore, except sometimes their names, because their works were now lost. Josephus, for
example, cites many former authors who then fell into anonymity.
24
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
cuneiform writing is particularly well suited to clay tablets which have the property of not
being perishable. However, although the first Sumerian dynasty of Kish I (beginning c.
2800 BCE) preceded the Akkadian dynasty of Uruk I (beginning c. 2500 BCE) the first
cuneiform inscription « Me-bara[ge]-si, king [of Ki]sh29 » appears only from the 22nd king of
Kish I, called Me-barage-si (2500-2485) who was a contemporary of the first king of Uruk I
called Mes-ki’aggašer (2496-2490). Some tablets dated stratigraphically prior -2500 are only
accounting documents (i.e. inventories or lists of offerings). According to Berossus30, a
Babylonian priest (c. 280 BCE): At the beginning of the reign of Alorus [supposed to be the first
Mesopotamian king] Oannes [Adapa] emerged from the Persian Gulf and taught the skills needed to write
and calculate and for all kinds of knowledge: how to build cities, to found temples and make laws, and the
epic Enmerkar and the Lord of Aratta reads: Because the messenger's mouth was too "heavy" and he
could not repeat (the message), the lord of Kullab [En-merkar] modeled clay and made to stand as a word
on a shelf. Before that day, it was not possible to fit the words into the clay. But then when the sun came up
that day, it was done: the lord of Kullab words did stand on a shelf —it was done! In fact, these two
quotes are complementary since En-merkar (2490-2483), who is presented as the 1st writer
just prior to the 5th king of Uruk I, Gilgamesh (2461-2401), was actually the 2nd king of
Uruk I. Cuneiform writing appears therefore at the same time as the first Akkadian
chancellery. The Sumerian chancellery had to exist, otherwise we would not know the first
royal list with the names and durations of reign of the 21 kings before En-Mebaragesi, but
this chancery had not to establish diplomatic ties with other cities. The Egyptian
hieroglyphic writing is particularly well suited to papyrus which have the property of being
perishable except in Egypt (and around the Dead Sea) because of very low humidity. The
first hieroglyphs appear on some label indicating the name of the 1st Dynasty pharaohs and
some words in hieratic appear on ostraca of the 3rd Dynasty. Then at the end of the 5th
Dynasty, appear the first texts in hieratic (Djedkarâ Isesi) and hieroglyphic (pyramid of
Unas). As livestock censuses began in the early dynasties (beginning c. 2800 BCE),
Egyptian chancelleries had to be operational from that time.
The emergence of foreign writing in Near Eastern kingdoms is more complicated
to date for at least 3 reasons: 1) their chancelleries were much smaller than those of
Egyptian and Babylonian empires (even the chancelleries of the Elamite Empire adopted
the Babylonian cuneiform, from Sargon of Akkad, to record their language. It was not
anymore the native language of Canaanite scribes31), 2) the language used by these
chancelleries was the standard Babylonian written on tablets from the reign of Hammurabi
(1697-1654) and 3) the support of writing used by most countries for their own language,
like Aramaic (Syian states) or Old Canaanite (Phoenician states), was papyrus and
parchment which do not keep long in these regions. The Assyrian Empire is a good
example of this complexity. From Tiglat-pileser I (1115-1076) who made vassal several
Phoenician states, Assyrian chancelleries adopted Aramaic as a second diplomatic language
beside Babylonian. Clay tablets were used for writing cuneiform (mainly Babylonian and
Assyrian languages) and scrolls for Aramaic (language of the rest of the empire). These
scribes32 were called in Akkadian ṭupšarru, from the Sumerian word DUB-SAR "tablet-write,"
and sepîru, translating the Sumerian KUŠ-SAR "skin-write".
E. SOLLBERGER, J.-R. KUPPER – Inscriptions royales sumériennes et akkadiennes
Paris 1971 Éd. Cerf pp. 39-40,130-131.
R.J. TOURNAY, A. SHAFFER – L'épopée de Gilgamesh
Paris 1994 Éd. Cerf pp. 7-10.
30 D. CHARPIN – Lire et écrire à Babylone
Paris 2008 Éd. PUF pp. 17-41.
31 A. LEMAIRE – La diffusion de l'alphabet dans le bassin méditerranéen
in: Langues et écritures de la Méditerranée (Éd. Khartala, 2006) pp. 200-201.
32 F. JOANNÈS - Dictionnaire de la civilisation mésopotamienne
Paris 2001 Éd. Robert Laffont pp. 763-766.
29
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SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
8
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
The Assyrian scribes are rarely represented33 (first
time around 800 BCE)34, but always by two: one with a
tablet and stylus and the other with a parchment and quill
(see opposite figure). Despite the indirect evidence of the
existence of Assyrian archives on parchment none of these
documents has yet been found. Achaemenid archives have
the same problem. According to Diodorus, Ctesias, who
lived in the time of Artaxerxes II, was said to have drawn
his information from past events, and laws, which were
recorded by Persians on royal parchments (Historical
Library II:32) that confirms the Bible (Est 6:1-2, 10:2).
Indeed, it seems that from the year 27 of Darius, after his
trip to Egypt, the Achaemenid administration has adopted
the use of Egyptian papyrus for writing their documents (to the detriment of tablets)
because after the writing of a digest of the Egyptian legal system (Book of Ordinances) in
the year 19 of Darius, then (year 27) an addendum was written in Aramaic on papyrus and in
documentary writing (on tablets?). Thus, the archives (non-perishable) from major temples
cease at the end of the reign of Darius and it's the same with most of the private archives
of Babylon's region35. In fact, if the archives of the great temples fall drastically from 495
BCE it is perhaps due to a centralization ordered by the palaces of Susa and Persepolis.
However, the palace of Persepolis was burned and destroyed by Alexander the Great and
the excavations at Susa have delivered so far no archive of the Achaemenid period36. Both
phenomena, local government reorganization and increasing of Aramaic influence on
Babylonian population were likely overlapping. So although the Assyrian and Achaemenid
Empire had possessed annals on parchment in Aramaic, there remains nothing.
Archaeologists concluded (obviously) that these records on parchment never existed.
According to archaeology the oldest traces of Phoenician script appear on the
sarcophagus of Ahiram in Byblos (dated 1000 BCE). But the story of Wenamun37, dated
year 5 of Smendes (1090-1064), contradicts this assertion. Wenamun explains that he was
sent to Palestine and after leaving Tyre he met Zakarbaal the prince of Byblos. In this city,
he negotiated with Werketer, the boat captain, who read out a journal roll of his forefathers in his
presence in order to prove the antiquity and legitimacy of his trade with Egypt (Story of
Wenamun II:9-11). The Egyptian story proves two points: 1) a mere boat captain could
read Phoenician in 1085 BCE (and also translate it into Egyptian) and 2) this writing
probably dated back at least to 1150 BCE (time of the Captain's forefathers).
Letters from El-Amarna Egyptian chancery cover a short period from Amenhotep
III (1383-1345) to Ay (1327-1323) but they show that Egypt, still a great power, used
Babylonian (cuneiform writing) as diplomatic language. This language mixing a lexicon
Canaanite with a Babylonian syntax was used for international trade with all the Near
Eastern kingdoms. Scribes in Canaan spoke Old Canaanite, close to Old Hebrew38, but
Egyptian scribes are usually represented in a seated position, equipped with sharpened rush pens, palettes and small water jars (ink).
J. B. PRITCHARD - The Ancient Near East in Pictures
Princeton 1969 Ed. Princeton University Press p. 74.
35 F. JOANNÈS - La Mésopotamie au 1er millénaire avant J.C.
2000 Paris Ed. Armand Colin pp. 16,17,144.
36 Among the 23,595 Babylonian texts listed in the form of tablets (J. EVERLING - Répartition chronologique et géographique des sources
babyloniennes in: Nouvelles Assyriologiques Brèves et Utilitaires, 2000, pp. 42-45), only 84 are dated during the reign of Xerxes, or 0.4% of the
total, in addition, these records come from 18 different sites (S. GRAZIANI - I testi Mesopotamici datati al regno di Serse 485-465 a. c. in:
Annali 46 sup. 47 (Rome 1986) Ed. Herder pp. X-XIII).
37 W.K. SIMPSON – The Report of Wenamon
in: The Literature of Ancient Egypt (2005) Ed. The American University in Cairo Press pp. 116-124.
38 E. LIPINSKI - Semitic Languages Outline of a Comparative Grammar
in: Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 80. Leuven 2001 Ed. Peeters pp. 59-60.
33
34
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
although it was their mother tongue39, no tablet written in paleo-Hebrew has been found.
This apparent paradox is explained by the fact that writing is associated with a type of
medium: cursive scripts (hieratic and paleo-Hebrew) to papyrus and cuneiform writings
(Babylonian and Hurrian) to clay tablets. Egyptian letters were written in two copies: an
original in hieratic on papyrus, sent to one of the three Egyptian commissioners living in
Canaan, with its copy in cuneiform for the Chancery of vassal kings40. The Egyptian copy
(for the commissioner) served as a reference to the translator in case of ambiguity in the
reading of the Babylonian tablet. As originals (sent into Canaan) were written on papyrus,
they disappeared, while copies on clay tablets have survived the centuries.
The Amarna letters are misleading because they give the illusion that diplomatic
couriers were common among great powers whereas we would have had almost nothing
over the period 1500-1200 without this exceptional discovery. For example, Egypt, in
addition to its diplomatic relations had also many important business relationships,
including with the Mycenaean empire and the famous city of Troy, as confirmed by the list
of the Aegean monument Amenhotep III (1383-1345) at Kom el-Hetan41, however no
trade contract has yet been found. The trade between Egypt and Aegean islands was
controlled by Phoenician sailors (Odyssey XIV:228-295). These commercial contracts had
to exist, at least in the major port cities of Phoenicia as Ugarit, Byblos, Beirut, Sidon and
Tyre, but have generally not been archived except by a few landowners and for a short
time. If one denies the existence of these contracts one arrives at a huge paradox: the
Phoenicians, main traders at the time, would have been able to write all languages, except
their own! This is not serious. The city of Ugarit, the only one in which we have found the
Chancery, provides the answer because some of these letters42 refer to wax tablets. Greek
merchants in connection with Phoenician sailors (Odyssey IV:617; VIII:158-164, XV:415471) should use this type of medium for writing because clay tablets are not convenient for
carrying on boats and poorly adapted to cursive scripts such as Greek and Phoenician. The
only character whose precise practice of writing (Mycenaean) in the works of Homer is
Proteus, the first king of Tiryns (Iliad VI:169), who used a "folded tablet": He [Proteus] gave
baneful signs to her, drawing on a folded tablet many mortal characters, he invited her to show it [the letter]
to her stepfather, for his ruin. This amazing remark (long considered fanciful) is in agreement
with recent archaeological discoveries43: the "folded tablet" would have been a diptych
made of wood covered with wax and "many characters" would be syllabograms of Linear B
(Mycenaean). As the clay tablets discovered in Crete are not real pieces of archiving but are
rather accounting documents, the originals would instead have been recorded on suitable
media such as palm leaves, according to Pliny (Natural History XIII:21), or more likely on
diptychs in wood covered with wax44, as shown by the Uluburun45 wreck dated around
1320 BCE. If Herodotus (The Histories II:44) was able to consult the archives of Tyre and
if the Phoenician priests were able to indicate the date (c. 2750 BCE) of the founding of
A.F. RAINEY – Canaanite in the Amarna Tablets Vol. 2
Leiden 1996 Ed. Society of Biblical Literature pp. 2-3, 15, 31-32.
40 W.L. MORAN - Les lettres d'El Amarna
in: LIPO n°13 Paris 1987 Éd. Cerf pp. 19-21.
S. WACHSMANN – Keftiu, the “Isles in the Midst of the Sea” and Alashia
in: Aegeans in the Theban Tombs (Peeters, 1987) pp. 93-101.
41 J. STRANGE – Caphtor-Keftiu: a new investigation
in: Acta Theologica Danica 14, Leiden 1980, Ed. E.J. Brill pp. 21-27.
42 S. LACKENBACHER – Textes akkadiens d'Ugarit
in: Littératures Anciennes du Proche-Orient 20 (Cerf , 2002), pp. 22 n.11, 202.
43 W. WAAL – They wrote on wood. The case for a hieroglyphic scribal tradition on wooden writing boards in Hittite Anatolia
in: Anatolian Studies 61 (2011) pp. 21-34.
44 J. DRIESSEN – Homère et les tablettes en linéaire B. Mise au point
in: L'Antiquité classique 61 (Bruxelles 1992), pp. 5-37.
45 C. PULAK – The Uluburun Shipwreck and Late Bronze Age Trade
in: Beyond Babylon: Art, Trade, and Diplomacy in the Second Millenium B.C. Metropolitan Museum, 2008.
39
9
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
10
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
the oldest temple in their city, confirmed by Archaeology, it implies that the Tyrians had
known writing for a long time. Pseudo-hieroglyphic script (also called Proto-Byblian) is
known from 10 inscriptions found in Byblos as well as Canaanite scarabs of the Second
Intermediate Period46. These inscriptions (still undeciphered), with many signs resembling
letters of the later Phoenician alphabet47, are engraved on bronze plates and spatulas, and
carved in stone. They are dated by some scholars between 2300 to 1750 BCE48.
Mycenaean writing49 (Linear B), the ancestor of modern Greek disappears around
1190 BCE with the destruction of the "third palaces" and reappears around 750 BCE, in a
new form (Archaic Greek), with the emergence of Greek cities. The fluidity of cursive
writing on clay tablets by Mycenaean scribes during the period 1450-1190 BCE involves a
widespread use of ink on parchment. In addition, some seals have retained the imprint of
ligatures on folded parchments50, which were the usual medium at this time in Greece51.
Mycenaean sailors therefore used wax tablets and parchments to write their contracts, but
there remains absolutely nothing. Similarly, Phoenician sailors had to have used the same
media for the same reasons. Even if Ugaritic is ranked among North Semitic languages
while Phoenician and Old Canaanite languages are classified as West Semitic they have
many things in common52 including the use of an alphabetic script. No Phoenician
contracts have been found, but several clay tablets in Ugaritic cuneiform (c. 1350 BCE)
were written with an alphabetic writing instead of a syllabary (general case). This confirms
that alphabet signs, not syllabaries, was reserved for Semitic writings (Ugaritic and
Phoenician), but as this medium was perishable these contracts all disappeared very soon.
Concerning Hebrew script used by the Israelites the situation is more complicated
than the previous cases because from their arrival in Canaan (c. 1500 BCE) until the
establishment of their first king (c. 1100 BCE) there was no Jewish Chancery and therefore
no official documents. However, the priests had to teach the Israelites concerning the Law
of Moses (Lv 10:8-11), which meant reading and writing even if this teaching activity was
not observed (2Ch 17:9). Some priests have been called Sopherim because they were
"literate" or "counters of letters" which shows the importance of writing for Israelites
(modern words such as decipher and zero come from Arabic sifr or Hebrew sepher). The
Hyksos who arrived in Palestine around 1500 BCE already spoke Old Canaanite as
evidenced by their Semitic names and knew proto-Canaanite writing (which has been used
in mines of Serabit el-Khadim). Coming from Egypt they probably continued to use
papyrus as writing material rather than parchment, more expensive and therefore rarely
used. The situation was reversed in Greece, according to Herodotus (The Histories V:58),
because of the scarcity of papyrus in Ionia. We note also that Moses asks to be "wiped out/
rubbed over" (Ex 32:32-33) not to be "scratched out", because to erase ink from a papyrus
it was enough to moisten it while a parchment had to be scratched out. Papyrus was (prior
to the 6th century BCE) the preferred medium for biblical scrolls as it could be (rarely)
eaten (Ezk 3:1-3) or sent to the bottom of a river by tying it with a stone (Jr 51:63-64), that
would not have been necessary with a parchment flowing pic.
D. BEN-TOR - Pseudo Hieroglyphs on Canaanite Scarabs
in: Journal of Ancient Egyptian Interconnections Vol 1:1(Israel Museum, 2009) pp. 1-7.
47 In addition, the name of all kings of Byblos (= Gebal "mountain") transcribed into hieroglyphs are of West Semitic origin.
48 J. GOODY -The Interface Between the Written and the Oral
Cambridge 1993 Ed. Cambridge University Press (1987), pp. 44-49.
49 R. TREUIL, P. DARCQUE, J.-C. POURSAT, G. TOUCHAIS -Les Civilisations égéennes du Néolithique et de l'Âge du Bronze
Paris 2008 Éd. Presses universitaires de France pp. 32, 138, 352-353, 454-457, 500-505.
50 Y. DUHOUX, A. MORPURGO DAVIES – A Companion to Linear B. Mycenean Greek Texts and their World Vol. 2
Louvain-la-Neuve 2001, Ed. Peeters pp. 124-125.
51 M.A. DESBOEUFS – Papyrus et parchemin dans l'antiquité gréco-romaine
Grenoble 2006-2007 Master2 Histoire et histoire de l'art (Université Grenoble II) pp. 52-54.
52 E. LIPINSKI - Semitic Languages Outline of a Comparative Grammar
in: Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 80. Leuven 2001 Ed. Peeters pp. 51-60.
46
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
Despite unfavorable conditions, absence of Chancery and use of a perishable
medium, it is possible to find traces of the script used by the Israelites through a few
ostraca written with ink. However there is a major difficulty, these ostraca are not datable
neither by carbon-14, due to an absence of carbon, nor by epigraphy, due to a lack of
documents, but by stratigraphy that only gives an imprecise interval of dates (for example
ostracon of Izbet Sartah in paleo-Hebrew is dated between 1200 BCE and 1000 BCE).
The inscriptions in paleo-Hebrew could actually have appeared as soon 1450 BCE.
Indeed, epigraphists consider that paleo-Hebrew having evolved from proto-Canaanite it
had truly been standardized only around 1000 BCE and prior to that date it was protoCanaanite. This conception of an evolution of writing is flawed for the following reason:
the standardization of inscriptions arises from the existence of scribal schools53 (who were
professionals dependent on a administration) because the slovenly inscriptions from
individuals are not standardized and the letters are drawn by their acronym (A aleph "beef"
(Ps 144:14) becomes head of an ox, R resh "head" (Dt 11:12) becomes a human head, etc.).
Thus the paleo-Hebrew would be just a standardized proto-Canaanite. This conclusion is
confirmed by the inscriptions discovered at Lachish. On a bowl we read the following
sentence: bšlšt / ym / yrḥ "in the 3rd day of the month [of ?]" and a ewer of the same time,
we read: mtn: šy [rb]ty ’lt "Mattan: offering [to?] my sover[eign] Elat". The word El being
above what looks like a candlestick with 7 branches (Ex 25:31-32?).
Bowl: bšlšt / ym / yrḥ
Ewer: mtn: šy [rb]ty ’lt
(1400-1300 BCE)
The writing appearing on the bowl (except the R that could be proto-Canaanite), on
the ewer and those in paleo-Hebrew dated 1550-148054 are identical. The epigraphic
ranking of these inscriptions as proto-Canaanite is artificial and Puech himself recognizes
that ceramics and archaeology recommend rather a date in the 14th century55. This dating
1400-1300 BCE is rejected by epigraphists since it would imply an early coexistence of
paleo-Hebrew with proto-Canaanite, although this is the most logical explanation. The
writer of these inscriptions must have been a Palestinian professional and not an individual,
because the writing on the bowl refers to a schedule, which requires an administrative
contract, and that on the ewer was for a temple. In both cases, the writing by a professional
C.A. ROLLSTON –Scribal Education in Ancient Israel: The Old Hebrew Epigraphic Evidence
in: Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 344 (2006) pp. 47-74.
54 S. DALLEY – Babylonian Tablets from the First Sealand Dynasty in the Schøyen Collection
in: Cornell University Studies in Assyriology and Sumerology Vol. 9 (CDL Press, 2009) pp. 1-16, 112, plates LIII, CLIIV.
55 E. PUECH –Origine de l'alphabet
in: Revue Biblique 93:2, 1986, pp. 177-178.
53
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SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
12
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
had to be standardized and was thus paleo-Hebrew. The language used in Lachish (that
name could mean "obstinate") was Old Canaanite, close to Old Hebrew. This important
Canaanite city was fortified because it was on the road giving access to Egypt. Although
Joshua destroyed it (Jos 10:32) during his conquest of Palestine (in 1493 BCE), Lachish had
again become Canaanite near 1400 BCE since a Canaanite temple was built at that time56,
replaced by a second temple in 1325 BCE and then by a temple III. The Amarna letters
show that during the period 1370-1350 this city, headed by Canaanite mayors was partly
Jewish [Paapu an Egyptian commissioner wrote to pharaoh in order to warn him against
the disloyalty of Šipṭi Ba‘la and Zimredda, mayors of Lachish (EA 333), ‘Abdi-Aštarti, the
mayor of Qiltu warned Pharaoh that Lachish was hostile to him (EA 335), ‘Abdi-Ḫeba, the
mayor of Jerusalem, informed Pharaoh that the city of Lachish helped Apiru (Hebrews)
and that some servants who joined them had hit Zimredda its mayor (EA 287, 288)]. The
Temple III was destroyed by Philistines around 1200 BCE (JG 10:7-8), then the city,
completely destroyed by fire around 1150 BCE57, again by Philistines (Jg 13:1), was
abandoned for a long period. It was rebuilt by Rehoboam (2 Ch 11:5-12) in 975 BCE.
During the period 1500-1200 the inhabitants of Lachish had Hebrew sounding names like:
Yaphia "radiant" (Jos 10:3); Yabni-Ilu "God created" (EA 328); Šipṭi Ba‘la "judgment of
Baal", Zimredda "melody (?) of Hadda" (EA 333). This is as true as the inhabitants of
Jerusalem: Adoni-Ṣédeq "Lord of justice" (Jos 10:3), ‘Abdi-Ḫeba "servant of Ḫeba" (EA
287). The inhabitants of Lachish, Jewish (Hebrew) or Canaanite, used the same language
(Old Canaanite), but for official documents Akkadian remained the norm58.
Without precise dating (to +/- 1 year) and without historical text,
most inscriptions discovered by archaeologists generally provide little
information. The Beth-Shemesh ostracon59 (opposite figure), for example,
comes from the Stratum IV (dated 1400-1200 by pottery)60, contains this
inscription: Jars of wine 7 (bt yn ......) to Azaah 1 (l‘z’ḥ .), Ahaz 1 (’ḥ‘z .),
Shimeon 4 (Šm‘n ....), Hanun 1 (Ḥnn .). Puech dates it 1300-1200 relying on
epigraphic criteria and ranks it as proto-Canaanite. However this
conclusion is questionable because of the very small number of ancient
inscriptions, thus epigraphic criteria are uncertain, which creates variables dating (up to 4
centuries!) among epigraphists. Moreover, according to the Bible (Jos 21:16; 1Sa 6:15; 1Ki
4:9), this city remained in Israelite territory since the conquest of Joshua (c. 1490 BCE)
until it was taken by the Philistines (c. 740 BCE) during the reign of Ahaz61 (2Ch 28:16-18),
which would rank the inscription as paleo-Hebrew rather than proto-Canaanite. As the
name Shimeon is typically Hebrew (Gn 29:33) the Canaanite origin of the inscription seems
unlikely. If ostraca in paleo-Hebrew are few, those quoting biblical passages are necessarily
rarer because there is always a gap of several centuries between the moment a book is
written and its dissemination to the public. Homer's books62, for example, were written
around 850-800 BCE according to Herodotus (The Histories II:53) and the Chronicle of
Paros marble, but the earliest fragments of papyrus (found in Egypt) of Homer's works are
R. DE VAUX - Histoire ancienne d'Israël des origines à l'installation en Canaan
Paris 1986 Éd. Gabalda pp. 80, 192.
57 D. USSISHKIN - Key to the Israelite Conquest of Canaan?
in: Biblical Archaeology Review 13:1 (1987) pp. 35-39.
58 W. HOROWITZ, T. OSHIMA, S. SANDERS – Cuneiform in Canaan. Cuneiform Sources from the Land of Israel in Ancient Times
Jerusalem 2006 Ed. Israel Exploration Society. The Hebrew University of Jerusalem pp. 4-19.
59 E. PUECH – Origine de l'alphabet
in: Revue Biblique 93:2 (1986) pp. 172-177.
60 A. MAZAR – Archeology of the Land of the Bible
New York 1990 Ed. Doubleday p. 242.
61 This town recaptured by Tiglath-Phileser III in 732 BCE will be finally destroyed by Nebuchadnezzar in 587 BCE.
62 V. BÉRARD, P. DEMONT, M.P. NOËL - L'Odyssée
1996 Librairie Générale Française , Le Livre de Poche p. 12.
56
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
dated more than 500 years later (285-250 BCE) and the oldest complete manuscript is the
Laurentianus dated around 1000 CE.
The excavations at Tell Qeiyafa (the camp enclosure
of 1Samuel 17:20?) have identified the city Shaaraim63 which
was inhabited until the reign of David (1Ch 4:31; 1Sa 17:52).
The end of this city has been dated 1010 +/- 40 BCE by
Carbon 14 through olive pits found in the site. Not only
does this town date back from the time of David but these
excavations have also unearthed a Hebrew inscription
(opposite figure), which reads:
[...
your neigbour?]
1) do not exploit and serve G[od]. Despised by
2) the judge, and the widow cried, he had power
3) over the foreign resident and the child he suppressed together.
4) Men and leaders have made a king.
5) Devoting <sixty> servants among the generations.
As noted Puech64, this text describes a situation identical to that of the biblical text
when the elders of Israel asked Samuel to enthrone a king (Saul) in order to replace his
sons who became corrupt judges (1Sa 8:1-5). The first (readable) line implicitly refers to a
well known passage of the Law of Moses: do not exploit your neighbour (Lv 19:13).
With the establishment of kingship in Israel the number of documents in paleoHebrew increases as well as texts referring to the Bible. However, documents relating to
the early Judean kings (David and Solomon) are few because their reigns took place during
a period of decline of the two great empires of Egypt and Mesopotamia. Among the 113
kings in the Levant listed during the period 1000-600 BCE, including those of the Bible,
only 16 are mentioned in inscriptions65. Despite the extent of their empire we know only
very little action of most Egyptian and Babylonian kings during this period (except the
name and the duration of their reign). According to the biblical text, the only outstanding
action with the Israelites involved the Egyptian kingdom. Absence of archaeological
remains of the famous temple of Solomon is explained by the fact that this temple was
destroyed by the Babylonians in the fall of Jerusalem. In addition, when King Herod the
Great restored the second temple, built on the remains of the previous one, he began by its
foundations that had eliminated last Solomonic vestiges66 because, according to Josephus,
Herod carried out a complete reconstruction of the temple (Jewish Antiquities XV:354,
380, 421). Consequently, when archaeologists invoke the absence of evidence to “prove”
that only Christian fundamentalists still believe that Moses is the author of the Pentateuch,
that sort of argument is disingenuous, because as we have seen, a professional scribe in
Mesopotamia around 1500 BCE called Aldinël “No judgment of God” was able to inscribe his
name in cuneiform: Ali-dîn-ili as well as in Paleo-Hebrew: ’LDN’L. Consequently, contrary
to what most Egyptologists claim, the writing of a narrative in paleo-Hebrew around 1500
BCE (Pentateuch) is quite logical.
Y. GARFINKEL, S. GANOR -Khirbet Qeiyafa: Sha’arim
in: The Journal of Hebrew Scriptures 8 (2008) article 22.
Y. LEVIN –The Identification of Qeiyafa: A New Suggestion
in: BASOR N°367 (August 2012) pp. 73-86.
64 E. PUECH –L'Ostracon de Khirbet Qeyafa et les débuts de la royauté en Israël
in: Revue Biblique 117 (2010) pp. 162-184.
65 A. MILLARD – King Solomon in his Ancient Context
in: The Age of Solomon (Brill 1997) Ed by L.K. Handy p. 46.
66 E.-M. LAPERROUSAZ – Les temples de Jérusalem
Paris 2007 Éd. Non Lieu pp. 51-74, 104-120.
63
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SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
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THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
According to Egyptian accounts the last king of the XVth dynasty, named Apopi,
“very pretty” in Hebrew like Moses’ birth name (Ex 2:2), reigned 40 years in Egypt (16131573), then 40 years later he met Seqenenre Taa the last pharaoh of the XVIIth dynasty.
The eldest son of Seqenenre Taa, Ahmose Sapaïr, who was crown prince died in a dramatic
and unexplained way shortly before his father. Seqenenre Taa died in May 1533 BCE, after
11 years of reign, in dramatic and unclear circumstances. The state of his mummy proves,
however, that his body received severe injuries and remained abandoned for several days
before being mummified (Ps 136:15). Prince Kamose, Seqenenre Taa's brother, assured
interim of authority for 3 years (1533-1530) and threatened to attack the former pharaoh
Apopi, new prince of Retenu (Palestine). In the Stele of the Tempest he also blames Apopi
for all the disasters that come to fall upon Egypt which caused many deaths. The 3 Hyksos
dynasties (XIV, XV, XVI) ruled Egypt approximately from 1750 to 1530 BCE and then
disappear abruptly after the death of Pharaoh Seqenenre Taa. One can notice that Egyptian
documents unanimously describe the departure of the Hyksos from Egypt to Palestine in a
disaster. Modern Egyptologists pictured a ‘war of the Hyksos’, however no document
speaks of war but only that Avaris, Hyksos’ capital, was looted and vandalized after their
departure. Moreover all accounts of former historians picture the Hyksos as the ancestors
of the Hebrews, led into Palestine under the leadership of Moses. The only way to date the
so-called “Hyksos' war” is to gather all historical and archaeological documents about the
Hyksos for establishing a chronology of the “Hyksos' war”, identifying who was Apopi,
determining where the Hyksos came from and where they went, dating the Hyksos war
according to the Egyptian chronology through synchronisms dated by astronomy and
dating the Exodus according to the Israelite chronology checked by absolute dates.
Modern Egyptologists suppose that: The Hyksos dynasty (XV) reigned a hundred years in
Egypt, succumbing only after a struggle that was very difficult for Egyptian nationalist Pharaohs, of whom
at least one of them was killed (Seqenenre Taa). Kamose began the liberation war, but it is Ahmose who
definitively eradicated the Hyksos domination by taking Avaris and Sharuhen67. Claude Vandersleyen,
despite offering a fictionalized version of the ‘liberation war of the Hyksos’, notes that: The
New Kingdom began in a strange silence of the sources. What happened there after the 3rd year of Kamose?
(...) It is curious that the most important event in the history of Egypt during an entire millennium, the
annihilation of the population of the Hyksos, was ignored in the inscriptions of King Ahmose dealing with
something quite different: a storm that destroyed the cemetery of Thebes, his concern about the perpetuation
of his grandmother, Queen Teti-Sheri, some gifts offered to the temple of Amun at Karnak, the wise
government of his mother, Queen Ahhotep, etc.., but not the main conquest of his reign68. He also argues
that there is no archaeological evidence of the Exodus under Ramses II and, therefore, that
the biblical Exodus under this Pharaoh would be a pious story, written after the fact,
embellished for posterity, which is the frequent conclusion of specialists69! Concerning the
chronology he acknowledges that: All these calculations lead us well before Ramses II, and
specifically in the 16th century. No doubt the reliability of these chronologies is unproven, but they are spaced
apart —whereas they exist— because they contradict the low dating of the Exodus that is not based on any
document (...) and should we push back the Exodus to the 16th century? (...) It was noted that all proposed
solutions to the problems of the Exodus are speculative and ignore infrequent figures preserved in the Bible
and Manetho. But the date given by Manetho — that the Exodus took place under Ahmose — is the
J. YOYOTTE – Dictionnaire des pharaons
Paris 1998 Éd. Noésis p. 85.
68 C. VANDERSLEYEN - L'Egypte et la vallée du Nil Tome 2
Paris 1995 Éd. Presses Universitaires de France p. 190, 193, 213, 232-237.
69 E. BLOCH-SMITH - Israelite Ethnicity in Iron I: Archaeology preserves what is remembered and what is forgotten in Israel's history
in: Journal of Biblical Literature 122/3 (2003) pp. 401-425
R. HENDEL - The Exodus in Biblical Memory
in: Journal of Biblical Literature 120/4 (2001) pp. 601-622.
67
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
15
only one truly accurate (...) In short, whatever the objections of exegetes today, we must not reject a priori to
study the problem of Exodus in connection with the expulsion of the Hyksos. The Egyptologist J.
Assmann70, also believing in the ‘liberation war of the Hyksos’, notes however that: All the
extra-Biblical versions agree that the aliens, or impure ones, are driven out of Egypt. In the Bible, the
Hebrews are retained in Egypt against their will and they are allowed to emigrate only after divine
interventions in the form of the plagues. But even in this version the account of the emigration contains
elements of expulsion. Of course, it would be most instructive to confront these different versions with what
could constitute historical evidence, but there is almost no such evidence. The only historical evidence which is
both archaeologically provable and semantically comparable with the content of theses different versions of the
expulsion/emigration story is the sojourn of the Hyksos in Egypt. If we apply the same question asked
previously about the Amarna experience to the Hyksos tradition and if we remain on the lookout for what
might have become of the memories that must have been shared by the expelled tribes about their stay in,
and domination of Egypt, we find ourselves again referred to the Exodus tradition. I completely agree with
Flavius Josephus and Donald B. Redford, who has held in various publications that the Hyksos' sojourn
in, and withdrawal from, Egypt was all that happened in terms of historical fact.
The name and order of some pharaohs based on archaeological finding remain
controversial but the following chronological framework is now accepted71:
Strata
MB IIA
MB IIB
MB IIB
MB IIC
MB IIC
Period
1975-1778
1778-1750?
1750?-1680?
1680?-1613
1613-1573
1573-1544
1544-1533
LB AI 1533-1530
1530
-1505
1505-1472
Egyptian Dynasty
12th (Lisht/ [Memphis])
13th (Lisht/ [Memphis])
(Thebes)
17th (Thebes)
Seqenenre Taa
Kamose
th
18 (Thebes)
Ahmose
Thutmose I
Vizier
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Asiatic Dynasty
Capital
14th (Hyksos)
15th (Great Hyksos)
Apopi
th
16 (Theban kings)
Tanis
Avaris
"
Edfu?
"
Apopi (=>Moses) Hyksos' War
Moses (Exodus)
Joshua in Palestine
(Sinai)
(1533-1493)
Jerusalem
According to dating Middle Bronze Age strata72 (+/- 30 years), the first part of the
13th Dynasty could be dated 1750-1650 BCE (MB IIB), the 15th Dynasty in 1650-1550 BCE
(MB IIC) and the beginning of the 18th Dynasty in 1550 BCE (LB AI). The material culture
of the Canaanite settlers in the eastern Delta displays a distinct similarity to the material
culture found at Middle Bronze Age sites in Palestine73 and studies of scarabs of the Middle
Bronze period from both region argue for the southern Levant as the place of origin of the
Second Intermediate Period foreign rulers in Egypt74. The site of Tell el-Dab‘a, identified
with ancient Avaris, was recently identified with the New Kingdom port of Prw Nfr, when
two possible harbours were found75. If the first Hyksos (14th dynasty) began to reign
around 1750 BCE, they had already arrived in Egypt for over a century and, according to
Egyptian records, most of them came from Palestine (called Retenu in Egyptian).
J. ASSMANN – The Memory of Egypt in Western Monotheism
Cambridge 1997 Ed. Harvard University Press pp. 40-41.
71 D. FRANKE – The 13th to 17th Dynasties: chronological framework
in: Egyptian Stelae in the British Museum from the 13th to 17th Dynasties Vol I:1 (The Bristish Museum, 2013) pp. 7-13.
72 M. BIETAK – Egypt and Canaan During the Middle Bronze Age
in: Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 281 (1991) pp. 27-72.
73 D. BEN-TOR – Scarabs, Chronology, and Interconnections: Egypt and Palestine in the Second Intermediate Period
in: Orbis Biblicus et Orientalis 27 (2007) pp. 1-3.
74 D. BEN-TOR – Can Scarabs Argue for the Origin of the Hyksos
in: Journal of Ancient Egyptian Interconnections 1:1 (2009) pp. 1-7.
75 B. BADER – Traces of Foreign Settlers in the Archaeological Record of Tell el-Dab‘a
in: Intercultural Contacts in the Ancient Mediterranean (Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 202, 2011) pp. 137-158.
70
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
16
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
THE HYKSOS ACCORDING TO HISTORICAL AND ARCHAEOLOGICAL DOCUMENTS
The Hyksos (ḥq3w ḫ3swt, “rulers of foreign lands”) must be understood as a foreign
dynasty that rules Egypt c. 1640-1530 BCE76. Their power was rooted in a population of
Near Eastern origin. Where they came from, how they came to power and how they
manage to assert themselves in Egypt are still matters of ongoing debate77. Flavius Josephus
used the designation “Hyksos” incorrectly as a kind of ethnic term for people of foreign
origin who seized power in Egypt for a certain period. In this sense, for sake of
convenience, it is also used in this article. One should never forget, however, that, strictly
spoken, the term “Hyksos” ( ḥeqa’ ḫa’st) was only used by Egyptians to indicate a “ruler
of foreign lands” resident in Egypt but native from Retenu (Syro-Palestine). The title ḥeqa’
‘aa "Great ruler" was also used to designate some Pharaohs (as Seqenenre Taa).
An illustration often cited as a classic example of Egyptian-Asiatic contact in the
early Middle Kingdom is the painting in Tomb No. 3 at Beni Hasan78. The Tomb belongs
to the nomarch Khnumhotep III, who is also an “Overseer of the Eastern Hill Countries”.
Besides illustrating the presentation of various types of “cattle” to the nomarch, the
painting depicts the arrival of a group of 37 Asiatics (‘3mw) who are being led by an
Egyptian with the title “Overseer of hunters”. The Asiatics are bearded, and wear the
traditional dress of Semites as depicted in Egyptian artwork; they carry weapons typical of
Middle Bronze Age Canaan, including what appear to be composite bows and a
“duckbilled” axe. One of the inscriptions that accompanies the painting describes the
arrival of the “Asiatics”, led by Absha (Ibš3), a “ruler of a foreign land (ḥq3 ḫ3st)”, who are
bringing black eye-paint to the nomarch Khnumhotep, here designated as the
“Administrator of the Eastern Desert” in the 6th year of Senwosret II's reign (1863-1855).
Absha, Hyksos' name, is Semite and means maybe "Father of prince" (Abshar)79.
80
These
Asiatics
coming
(Sudu[m]
thenisMoab)
galena
As
Galena,
the(‘3mw)
material
from from
whichShutu
the black
eye-paint
ground,to isbring
commonly
(msdmt) into Egypt were Canaanites. Galena, the material for the black eye-paint, was likely
M. BIETAK – From Where Came the Hyksos and Where did they go?
in: The Second Intermediate Period (Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 192, 2010) pp. 139-181.
77 R.M. ENGBERG – The Hyksos Reconsidered
in: Studies in Ancient Orriental Civilization 18 (The University of Chicago Press, 1939) pp. 1-50.
78 S.L. COHEN - Canaanites, Chronologies, and Connections
Indiana 2002, Ed. Eisenbrauns pp. 33-50.
79 The sound r is often rendered by an Egyptian 3 at this time, but the reading Abshay "Father of gift" (2Sa 10:10) is also possible.
80 J. KAMRIN – The procession of “Asiatics” at Beni Hasan
in: Cultures in Contact: From Mesopotamia to the Mediterranean in the Second Millennium B.C. (Metropolitan Museum of Art 2013) pp. 156-169.
76
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
produced in this region because the third daughter of Job (c. 1650 BCE), who dwelled near
Punon (Faynan) in Edom, was called “Horn of the black-(eye)-paint” (Job 42:14). In the
inscription of Weni (c. 2200 BCE) the term ‘3mw is used only in relation to the nomads of
the Sinai Desert but it is extended to all the populations in Syria-Canaan as a sign of
disdain81. Similarly, the Asiatics (‘3mw) in the Instruction to King Merikare (c. 2050 BCE) are
depicted as wild and unruly82. In fact, some of the earliest evidence relating to Egyptian
contact with the southern Levant during the Middle Bronze Age comes from the very
beginning of the Middle Kingdom during the reign of Mentuhotep II83 (2045-1994).
The extent of contact with Canaan, and Egyptian views of Asiatics, do not appear
to change in any significant way during the reign of Amenemhet I (1975-1946). Although
the evidence is slight, “The Prophecy of Neferty”, a text associated with Amenemhet I
makes mention of Asiatics: He (Neferty) was concerned for what would happen in the land. He thinks
about the condition of the east. Asiatics (‘3mw) travel with their swords, terrorizing those who are
harvesting, seizing the oxen from the plow (...) All happiness has gone away, the land is cast down in
trouble because of those feeders, Asiatics (Styw) who are throughout the land. Enemies have arisen in the
east, Asiatics (‘3mw) have come down to Egypt. A fortress is deprived of another beside it, the guards do
not pay attention of it (...) Asiatics (‘3mw) will fall to his sword, Libyans will fall to this flame, rebels to
his wrath, traitors to his might, as the serpent on his brow subdues the rebels to him. One will build the
“Wall of the Ruler”, life prosperity and health, to prevent Asiatics (‘3mw) from going down into Egypt84.
The Egyptian words Aamu (‘3mw) and Retenu (Rtnw) are usually translated as
"Asiatics" and "Syria-Palestine", they fit well to the biblical terms "people of Canaan" and
"Canaan". As the Execration Texts85 transcribe the names Ascalon and Jerusalem by
’Isq3nw (Ašqalun) and 3wš3mm ([U]rusalimum), the Egyptian letter 3 being used for sound
r/l (up to 1800 BCE), the word ‘3mw, could be read Aramu "those of Aram". The region of
Aram is very ancient, it appears as A-ra-meki in inscriptions of Naram-Sin (2163-2126), but
its location seems to have changed over time, from the area of Akkad to Syria86. "Aramean
ancestor" is rendered "Syrian" in the Septuagint (Dt 26:5). The Egyptian word Setiu (Styw)
is also translated as "Asiatics", but refers more specifically to Suteans [of Moab]. When
Idrimi (1500-1470) fled to the south of Syria, he met the Sutu [Suteans], and then lived 7
years with the Habiru [Hebrews] in the country of Ki-in-a-nimki [Canaan]87. This term
Canaan, which is Semitic, does not appear in Egyptian texts, moreover, because of
migration, it has designated different areas: Lebanon at the time of Ebla88, circa 2300 BCE,
Upper Mesopotamia at the time of Mari, c. 1800 BCE (Ki-na-aḫ-nu)89, Syria-Palestine at the
time of Idrimi (c. 1500 BCE), Philistia at the time of Merenptah (c. 1200 BCE).
A.F. RAINEY – Sinuhe’s World
in: “I will Speak the Riddles of Ancient Times » (2006, Eisenbrauns), pp. 277-299.
82 But there is a gap between official inscriptions from Pharaoh (always warlike) and private inscriptions from officials (peaceful).
83 A fragmentary stele found in a secondary context in an 18th dynasty palace at El-Deir represents one of Mentuhotep's monument that
might describe an historical occurrence rather than simply presenting a standardized and traditional bellicose attitude toward Asiatics and
other foreigners. The stele recounts a military expedition and mentions (line x + 8): the hinterland, the Qedem lands and possibly an
additional statement about easterners. As Qedem is the same Semitic term meaning “the East” used by Sinuhe to describe the region in
which he spent most of his exile after he reached Byblos, this may indicate that part of this particular campaign or military conflict
occurred somewhere in the Levant (probably Lebanon).
84 J.K. HOFFMEIER – Israel in Egypt. The Evidence for the Authenticity of the Exodus Tradition
New York 1996 Ed. Oxford University Press pp. 58-59.
85 R. DUSSAUD – Nouveaux textes égyptiens d'exécration contre les peuples syriens
in: Syria 21:2 (1940) pp. 170-182
86 E. LIPINSKI – The Aramaeans. Their Ancient History, Culture, Religion
in: Analecta 100, Peeters 2000, pp. 25-40.
87 P. GARELLI, J.M. DURAND, H. GONNET, C. BRENIQUET - Le Proche-Orient Asiatique
Paris 1997 Éd. P.U.F. pp. 139-140.
88 kù nig-ba dBE(lum) Ga-na-na-im "gift (for) the lord of Canaan"; é dGa-na-na-im "temple of divine Canaan" see J.N. TUBB – Peoples of the
Past. Canaanites. London 1998 Ed. British Museum p. 15 and A. ARCHI –The Head of Kura-The Head of ’Adabal in: Journal of Near
Eastern Studies 64:2 (2005) pp. 81-100.
89 G. DOSSIN – Une mention des Cananéens dans une lettre de Mari
in: Syria n°50 1973, pp. 277-282.
81
17
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
18
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
Egypt's Asiatic policy appears to have changed during the reign of Amenemhet I's
successor. ‘The Tale of Sinuhe’, a fictional account composed during the reign of
Senwosret I (1946-1901), indicates an increased interest in the southern Levant and its
inhabitants. The Egypto-Canaanite relationship portrayed in the story continues to be one
of détente and reasonably cordial relations. Several elements in the story relate peaceful
encounters between Egyptians and Canaanites. When Sinuhe leaves Egypt and travels out
into the desert, he is saved by a group of Bedouins, the chief of whom is described as “a
man who had been in Egypt”. Furthermore, the Bedouin chief is said to “recognize”
Sinuhe; thus, not only had the chief been in Egypt, but he may also have been in the
capital, where Sinuhe, as a courtier, would have resided prior to his flight. This incident
may indicate that, despite the bellicose rhetoric about smiting and crushing sand-dwellers
and the like, there were comparatively peaceful relations between the Egyptians and their
Asiatic neighbours. One reads: I gave a road to my feet northward and attained the Wall of the
Prince, which was made to repel the Asiatics (Styw) and to crush the Sandfarers (...) I set forth to Byblos; I
pushed on to Qedem. I spent half a year there; then Amu-son-of-Ensi, prince of Upper Retenu, took me
and said to me: Thou farest well with me, for thou hearest the tongue of Egypt. This he said, for that he
had become aware of my qualities, he had heard of my wisdom; Egyptian folk, who were there with him,
had testified concerning me (...) I spent many years, and my children grew up as mighty men, each one
controlling his tribe (...) for this prince of Retenu (ḥq3 pn n Rtnw) caused me to pass many years as
commander of his host (...) His Majesty sent to me with gifts of the Royal bounty, and gladdened the heart
of this his servant, as it had been the ruler of any foreign country (ḥq3 n ḫ3st) Thou hast traversed the
foreign lands and art gone forth from Qedem to Retenu (...) The Asiatics (‘3mw) shall not convert thee (...)
Let now Thy Majesty cause to be brought Ma[l]ki from Qedem (...) Then His Majesty said to the Royal
Consort: "Behold Sinuhe, who is come as an Asiatic (‘3m), an offspring of Asiatics(Styw)-folk".
Considerable details indicating increased Egyptian activity and interest in Canaan
can be found in a fragmentary inscription dating to Amenemhet II (1901-1863). From his
Annals one reads90: Number of prisoners brought from these
foreign lands: 1554 Asiatics ([‘3]m); as slave tribute from
Levantine rulers: 1002 Asiatics ([‘3]m). If Egyptian
inscriptions mention traditionally 9 hereditary enemies,
their representations are limited to Asiatics in the north
and Nubians (Cushites) in the south. A gold pectoral
from the tomb of Khnumhotep II (opposite figure), for
example, describes an elite Hyksos man with thick hair,
small beard and two bands crossed over the chest.
Khnumhotep II was a nomarch during the reigns of
Amenemhet II (1901-1863), Senwosret II (1863-1855)
and Senwosret III (1855-1836).
The impression of peaceful relations gains
support from the several graffiti that describe the visit of
“the brother of the prince of Retenu, Khebded” at the
Egyptian mines. A relief scene, dating to Amenemhet III
(1836-1791), depicts the arrival of this individual.
Khebded comes to the Sinai mines at Serabit el-Khadim
riding on a donkey which is led by one man91, and driven
from behind by another. The skin of the men is painted
K.A. KITCHEN - On the Reliability of the Old Testament
Cambridge 2003 Ed. W.B. Eerdmans p. 636.
91 P. TALLET - Sésostris III et la fin de la XIIe dynastie
Paris 2005 Éd. Pygmalion pp. 160-162.
90
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
yellow (following the Egyptian convention for Asiatics). They wear short kilts, and,
significantly, they are armed, thus reinforcing the impression that the Egyptians have not
coerced the Asiatics into participating in the campaigns. Other Sinai inscriptions list
Asiatics among the participants of the expedition. For example, an inscription dating to
Senwosret III (1855-1836), lists “the Asiatic Rua, possessor of honour”, last in a series of
officials carved on the apron of a statue assumed to be of the king. Inscriptions, from
Amenemhet III (1836-1791) and from Amenemhat IV (1791-1782), mention the
participation of 10 and 20 Asiatics (‘3m.w) from Retenu, respectively.
Although the decrease in both the quality and the quantity of monuments, public
buildings, and other forms in Egypt reveals a downward trend, Egypt's power and prestige
abroad do not seem to have weakened until well into the 13th dynasty. Although no
monuments or inscriptions exist which speak specifically of Egyptian-Canaannite relations,
a relief at Byblos shows the local prince doing homage to Neferhotep I (1700-1685?), one
of the more powerful and longer-lived kings of the 13th dynasty. Beginning with the Late
12th dynasty92, the rulers of Byblos styled themselves ḥ3ty-‘ n kpny, ‘Governor of Byblos’.
The title ḥ3ty-‘ n GN is Egyptian and was used to designate the governors of Egyptian
domains, mainly of larger cities and nomes within Egypt during the Middle Kingdom and
Second Intermediate Period, but also of the large forts in Nubia. Foreign chieftains, on the
other hand, were designated wr ‘great’ and ḥq3 ‘ruler’. The fact that the rulers of Byblos
used a specific title suggests therefore that they regarded Byblos as an Egyptian domain and
saw themselves as its governors on behalf of the Egyptian king. This situation is
substantiated by two sources of a different nature, a relief found at Byblos and a cylinderseal of unknown provenance. The relief depicts the ‘Governor of Byblos Yantinu (in-t-n)
who was begotten by Governor Yakin (y3-k-n)’ seated upon a throne in front of which is
inscribed a cartouche with the prenomen and nomen of Neferhotep I. The cylinder-seal is
inscribed for a certain Yakin-ilu in cuneiform on one side and the prenomen of king
Sewesekhtawy on the other side. The fact to record the name of the Egyptian king within
those specific context strongly suggests that they regarded themselves officially as
subordinates of the Egyptian king. It is notable that it was the Egyptian king (13th dynasty)
rather than the Canaanite kings (14th dynasty) who were recognized as the superiors at
Byblos. However, Yantinu, whose name is evidently hypocoristic, is identical to a certain
Yantin-‘Ammu recorded as ‘king of Byblos’ (lugal gu-ub-laki) in an administrative document
found at Mari. Cartouches were used by at least two of the governors, one of whom also
used the royal epithet mry DN, ‘beloved of DN’, and another governor adopted the epithet
ḥq3-ḥq3w, ‘Rulers of rulers’. The use of cartouches reveals in no uncertain manner that
while the men in question officially designated themselves as governors, they clearly
regarded themselves as the actual rulers of Byblos. This may well explain why Yantin‘Ammu was described as King of Byblos at Mari.
A prince of the land Iry93, which was most probably situated near Sidon
(where the seal was found), had the throne name of king Amenemhet III
translated into West Semitic Ddq3-R‘ “justice of Râ (Ṣaduqa-Râ)”, bore the
epithet “beloved of Baal (the name of the god is written with the logogram of
Seth), lord of Iry (nb i-3-y)”. On a stele at Serabit el-Khadim on Sinai,
contingents of Near Easterners are listed among the personnel of mining
expeditions that took place during the late 12th Dynasty. An Asiatic dignitary called
“brother of the ruler of Retenu” participated at least four times. The “ruler of Retenu”
K.S.B. RYHOLT – The Political Situation in Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period c. 1800-1500 B.C.
Copenhagen 1997, Ed. Carsten Niebuhr Institute Publications Vol. 20 pp. 86-89,123.
93 M. BIETAK – From Where Came the Hyksos and Where did they go?
in: The Second Intermediate Period (Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 192, 2010) pp. 147, 157.
92
19
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
20
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
most probably had his seat at Avaris or Tanis94, and that it may have been from
there that the expeditions were organised. In a tomb of Tell el Dab‘a (Avaris),
attached to a palatial mansion, has been found a scarab (opposite figure) of the
late 12th Dynasty whose inscription names a “[ruler of R]etenu: S-b-’k-w-rw?”.
Some scarabs and seals dating to the 13th Dynasty have been excavated
from MB IIA tombs and occupation levels at many Canaanites sites, such as
Acco, Tell el-‘Ajjul, Ashkelon, Jericho, and Megiddo, which may indicate a high level of
Egyptian-Canaanite contact and interaction. Evidence also points to increasing numbers of
Asiatics within Egypt, large numbers of whom seem to have been in domestic service
(people well open to exploitation, in fact akin to slavery). In Brooklyn papyrus 35.144695,
almost 2/3 of one household's staff (95 names) have Asiatic names, while other documents
contain titles such as “officer in charge of Asiatic troops” and “scribe of the Asiatics”. This
document, dated from year 10 of Amenemhet III (1836-1791) to year 2 of Sobekhotep III
(c. -1700), is a record of the Bureau of labour96. It shows that at this time there were many
Asiatics who were working for Egyptian masters. The document further indicates that
these Asiatic names were systematically changed into Egyptian names, which is consistent
with the Egyptian custom of that time, as stated in the biblical text in the case of Joseph
(Gn 41:45). Most of these names are clearly West Semitic as Aquba, Menahem, Asher,
Shiphra (Ex 1:15), Hiabi-ilu, Sakar and [Ab]i-Baal, Baal-tuya97. Several names also contain
the form Aper(u) ‘pr(w) which could be the cause of the designation of an ethnic group
later known as Apiru98 in the el-Amarna letters.
From the 12th dynasty these Asiatics (Aamu), who accounted for between 1/6 (at
Abydos) and 1/3 (at Kahun) of the population of Egypt99, would be considered Egyptians
"of Asiatic origin" (Hyksos). They are conventionally represented as Egyptians (only their
Asiatic origin is mentioned in the texts). Many of these Asiatics entered the country as
prisoners of war, others were born in Egypt from Asiatic parent. They were employed in
households, on agricultural estates and in the service of temples. Their presence is evident
in lists of household members and working crews on papyri, especially the ones of Kahun.
A study of texts on funerary stele and other material of the time, shows that among 2600
people who appear on these objects, 800 were either themselves Aamu (‘3m.w) or had Aam
(‘3m) relatives, or stood in some kind of —often job-related— connection with them. On a
stele from Abydos, belonging to Amenyseneb, overseer of the monthly priesthood of a
temple at Abydos, among 17 men and women whose figures are preserved, 3 are
designated as Aamu: the brewer Iri, a female miller Senebit, and a man called Sobekiry.
About 12% of workers portrayed in the tomb of Pahery, governor of El-Kab (c. -1480),
were Asiatic (through representation of their heads).
To sum up, the arrival of Asiatics in Egypt, from the 12th dynasty, was the result of
continuing immigration from Syria-Palestine, which is consistent with the biblical account
(Gn 41:41-45,50-1; 46:5-7,27). We therefore should not talk of an ‘invasion’. It is in such a
context that has been described the Hyksos dynasties appeared.
Tanis in Egypt (Ps 78:12) and Hebron in Canaan (Gn 23:2) have been founded and named by Abraham (Nb 13:22).
J.B. PRITCHARD - Ancient Near Eastern Texts
Princeton 1969 Ed. Princeton University Press pp. 553-554.
96 B. MENU – Le papyrus du Brooklyn Museum n° 35.1446 et l'immigration syro-palestinienne sous le Moyen Empire
in: Égypte NIlotique et Méditerranéenne 5 (2012) pp. 19-30.
97 G. POSENER – Les asiatiques en Egypte sous les XIIe et XIIIe dynasties
in: Syria 34:1-2 (1957) pp. 145-163.
98 The tribe of Ephraim, as the largest group, represented all the Israelites (2Ch 25:7, Jr 7:15). It is therefore possible that the Egyptian
term Apiru, “those of Aper” in Egyptian, has been used to designate the Ephraimites. The text of Genesis 41:50-52 connects the name
Ephraim (duel form) to hiphrah "made fruitful" and not to epher (‘aphar means "dust"). The term ‘prw (‘Apiru) is rendered by ‘prm in
Ugaritic, Ha-pi-rum or Ha-pi-ri in some Akkadian proper names (HOCH pp. 61-63).
99 D. ARNOLD – Image and Identity: Egypt's Eastern Neighbours, East Delta People and the Hyksos
in: The Second Intermediate Period (Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 192, 2010) pp. 183-221.
94
95
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
Amidst the 35 texts100 from stela dated to the period 1950-1700 BCE and over 75
instances of individuals of Asiatic ancestry, only 5 names may be of Semitic origin101, the
rest being simply ‘3m "Asiatic" or derived from the Egyptian. For example, a text (dated c.
1830 BCE) reads: His Majesty's proceeding in travelling northwards to overthrow the Mntw-St.t;
[Bedouins of Negeb] his Majesty's arrival at the district of Skmm [Shechem]102, its name; his Majesty's
making a good start in proceeding to the Residence, may it live, be prosperous and healthy. Then Shechem
fell with the miserable Rtnw [Palestine], I acting as the army's rearguard. Then the soldiers of the army
engaged to fight with the ‘3m.w [Asiatics]. Then I hit the ‘3m and I caused that his weapons be taken by 2
soldiers of the army, without desisting from fighting, my face was courageous and I did not turn my back on
the ‘3m. As Senwosret [III] lives (for me), I have spoken in truth. On a stela (dated c. -1750) an
Egyptian worker from Byblos is called: Hall-keeper of (goods) from Byblos (Kpni): Sebekherhab.
Pictorially, individuals labelled ‘3m are illustrated as Egyptians seated, kneeling or standing.
Unfortunately, publications of most of the stelae are in grey-scale, restricting any comments
on skin colour. Where coloured photographs are presented, no colour is preserved for the
Asiatic men. A few Asiatics bear offerings, including ox legs, lotus stems, fowl as well as
baskets or vessels. Three appear engaged in daily activities such as pouring beer, grinding
grain and sowing seed. The stelae offer a significant insight into the Asiatics' acceptance of
Egyptian traditions. The majority of identified Asiatic descendants are represented with
Egyptian names, titles and dress, taking part in Egyptian daily activities and rituals. Two
stelae owners are conclusively of Asiatic descent, leading to the proposition that such
individuals also assumed Egyptian religious obligations by placing their stelae at Abydos.
Furthermore, they appear familiar with Egyptian deities as apparent by the utilisation of
offering formulae expressing their devotion to Osiris, Anubis, Geb and Hapy.
The 35 texts present substantial evidence on the status of Asiatics within Egyptian
society. They illustrate: 1) A slight increase in the number of Asiatics during the 13th
Dynasty and early Second Intermediate Period, perhaps resulting in 'hybrid' artistic fusions
reaching Abydos; 2) The presence of Asiatics, both male and female, working and living
among Egyptians of mid to high social rank; 3) The acceptance of Asiatics in the social,
administrative and military spheres; 4) Asiatics partaking in Egyptian religious duties and
daily activities; 5) The artistic representations of Asiatics as Egyptians; 6) A lack of bellicose
representations of Asiatics after Senwosret Ill's reign and 7) The elite's control of trade with
the north, particularly the Northern Levant, during the 13th Dynasty.
Abydos was certainly accessible to Asiatics, a few of whom placed their own stelae
at the site following popular Egyptian traditions. They were employed within the Egyptian
administration, holding titles involved with private households as well as the local
administration and workforce. Some may also have resided in Egypt for over three
generations, adopting particular aspects of the Egyptian culture and intermingling with the
local population without abandoning their own ancestry. The Egyptians accepted the
foreign lineage of their neighbours and did not represent them in a derogatory way. Despite
records of conflict over the borders, the situation within Egypt marks mutual work and
family relations. Descendants of Asiatics were recognised for their contributions and were
most probably encountered on a daily basis, in typical situations and, at the very least, by
middle to high ranking individuals within Egypt as far south as Abydos. Therefore, the
stela convey considerable data on the rising status and recognition of the Asiatic
population, noting that, in the time preceding the rise of the Hyksos, Abydos was more
than familiar with Asiatic descendants —it was also visited by them.
A.-L. MOURAD – Asiatics and Abydos from the Twelfth Dynasty to the Early Second Intermediate Period
in: The Bulletin of the Australian Centre for Egyptology Vol. 24 (2013) pp. 31-58.
101 Ama (’Imi) "Mama"; Aba (’Ibi) "Papa"; Dudi (?) (Twtÿ) "my beloved one"; Gbgb (?); ‘i (?) and maybe a sixth name: Aper (‘pr).
102 Shechem is written Skmm (instead of Skm) as in Execration Texts (dated c. 1950 BCE).
100
21
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
22
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
The Second Intermediate Period [S.I.P.] encompasses the 13th to the 17th Dynasties
but this arrangement is primarily a product of the Manetho tradition. Nowhere does
Manetho's reputation suffer more than in his coverage of the S.I.P., that amorphous
historical stretch bridging the gap between the end of the 12th and the beginning of the 18th
Dynasty. Not only does his dynastic chronology stray wildly out of bounds for this period,
but the three surviving versions of his history — in Josephus, Africanus and Eusebius —
radically disagree with each other as to which kings and which political groups ruled which
dynasties and how long each of the dynasties lasted (Josephus' version could be the more
reliable). Manetho originally had a group of 32 Hyksos kings in Xois and 6 Hyksos kings
who established their capital in the city of Avaris. They reigned 103 years according to
Eusebius' version. And 37 Theban kings, perhaps identically, following the arrangement in
the Turin Canon of Kings, which had 32 Hyksos kings preceding the 6 six Great Hyksos
kings who reigned 108 years and 37 or 38 Theban kings following afterwards103.
Despite numerous errors and their incomplete state, the existence of such lists
shows that these royal dynasties were considered Egyptian. The ranking of dynasties is in
chronological order, each dynasty being linked to a capital. Archaeological remains104 have
confirmed Manetho's report, except for Xois (its name ḫ3sww is close to the word
"foreigners" in Egyptian). The first capital of the Hyksos was Tanis. This is deduced from
the presence of sphinxes and royal statues dated the Middle Kingdom (12th and 13th
dynasties) found in the sanctuary of Amon, the latest relic of this period being the statue of
Sobekhotep IV105 (1686-1677). This is consistent with the biblical account which located
the settlement of the Hebrews in the land of Goshen, also referred to as the "Field of
Tanis" (Gn 45:10; 47:11; Ps 78:12, 43), called “Field or marshland of Tanis (D‘(n)w)” in
Egyptian106. The city of Tanis would have been founded by Amenemhat I107. According to
the Bible, after arriving in Canaan at 75 years old (in 1963 BCE), Abraham would have
changed the name of Kiriath-arba “city of four" into Hebron “joining” (Gn 23:1) and then,
7 years later, would found the Egyptian city of Tanis (Nb 13:22). Despite the fact that data
regarding Tanis are few it is possible to reconstruct its past precisely enough.
In order to better control southern Canaan and northern Egypt under tension at
that time108, Amenemhat I moved his capital (Thebes) to Itjtawy during his 20th year of
reign and appointed his son (Senusret I) as co-regent, he also claims to have built Bubastis,
Khatana (Qantir) and Tanis. According to the Bible, Tanis (San el-Hagar), former capital of
the Hyksos, was founded in 1957 BCE, 7 years after Hebron. This town had to have been
founded by Abram (in cooperation with Amenemhat I) because the name Tanis, Ṣo‘an in
Hebrew (Sa-a-nu in Assyrian), means "moving tents" (Is 33:20), whereas in Egyptian Da‘an
(Djaân) means nothing. Qantir is believed to mark what was probably the ancient site of
Ramses II's great capital, Pi-Ramses or Per-Ramses. The ancient site of Avaris is about 2
km south of Qantir. Later on, Avaris was absorbed by Pi-Ramses. Tanis' history is very
poorly known. In the Report of Wenamon (dated 1085 BCE) Tanis is written Da‘an, however
in The Pleasures of Fishing and Fowling (dated c. 1400 BCE) we read (line 14)109: Seḫet-Da‘aw
G. GREENBERG – Manetho. A Study in Egyptian Chronology
Pennsylvania 2004 Marco Polo Monographs pp. 103-144.
104 M. DESSOUDEIX – Chronique de l'Égypte ancienne
Paris 2008 Éd. Actes Sud pp. 169-177.
105 J. LECLANT – Tanis. L'or des pharaons
Paris 1987. Éd. Ministère des affaires étrangères pp. 183-187.
106 D. VALBELLE – Tanis
in: Dictionnaire de l'Antiquité sous la direction de Jean Leclant 2005 Éd. PUF p. 2123.
107 N. GRIMAL - Histoire de l'Égypte ancienne
Paris 1988 Éd. Fayard p. 212.
108 This tension came from Chedorlaomer, a powerful Elamite king (see Dating the Chedorlaomer's death).
109 R.A. CAMINOS – Literary Fragments in the Hieratic Script
Oxford 1956 Ed. Oxford University Press pp. 19-20.
103
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
23
"Field of Tanis", the same expression as in Psalm 78, which appears in the sequence [Sḫt]D‘w (Fields of Tanis), Ḥwt-w‘rt (Avaris), Rḫty (?). It is precisely the same sequence: Sḫt-D‘(n),
Ḥwt-w‘rt, Rḫtt that we find in the geographical procession in Ramses II's temple. The 400
Year Stela, found at Tanis, is a large slab of stone erected (c. 1280 BCE) by Ramses II to
commemorate the 400th anniversary of the establishment of the reign of the god “Seth,
Great of Power, the Ombite (the Baal or "Lord" of the Hyksos)”. A paleographical study
of the name D‘(n)110 shows that this toponym must go back to the end of the Old
Kingdom111. The city of Tanis must have been founded at the beginning of the 12th dynasty
because the statues of almost all the sovereigns of this dynasty, including Amenemhat I,
remained there in that city. However, apart from the doorways erected in Bubastis,
Khatana and Wadi Natrûn, Amenemhat did not leave any other buildings in the Delta112.
From an inscription unearthed in Khatana, alongside a statue depicting Amenemhat sitting,
it is clear that the king was responsible for erecting a building here to which the door gave
entrance. In addition one of the officials who lived under the reign of Amenemhat made a
stela in which the 3rd line reads: year 20[? under] the majesty of... that enables us to date the
building in 1957 BCE. Seeing that the doorway is still in its original place and that during
the reign of Amenemhat I and Senusret III who were concerned with the doorway, the
district was flourishing. Given that the doorway is still lying near its original place, we can
suppose it was the same for Tanis where there was also a statue depicting Amenemhat I
sitting. The few buildings built by Amenemhat I in the Delta were built to win the
sympathy of the people in this region because of the prophecy of Neferty113. The famous
prophecy of Neferty could be related to the 400-year prophecy given to Abraham: Then He
[God] said to Abram: Know for certain that your offspring will be foreigners in a land not theirs and that
the people there will enslave them and afflict them for 400 years. But I will judge the nation they will serve,
and after that they will go out with many goods (Gn 15:13-14).
The comparison of archaeological data with the Turin Canon list shows that the
Hyksos dynasties (14th, 15th and 16th) should be in parallel114:
Length
Egyptian Dynasty
Period
(Turin King-list)
1975-1778
213 years
12th (Lisht/ [Memphis])
1778-1750?
[?]
13th (Lisht/ [Memphis])
1750?-1680?
1680?-1572?
108 years
1572?-1530
[?]
17th (Thebes)
1530-1295
18th (Thebes)
Asiatic Dynasty
(Capital)
King
Vizier
Vizier
Vizier
Vizier
14th (Tanis)
15th (Avaris)
16th (Edfu?)
Hyksos
Great Hyksos
Thebans
Chronological reconstruction of the Second Intermediate Period is very uncertain,
including the succession of kings115, it is based on the following elements:
The absence in writing would suggest a nasalized letter (ã for an), like Sheshãq instead of Sheshanq.
J. YOYOTTE – Conférence de M. Jean Yoyotte
in: Annuaire École Pratique des Hautes Études Tome 91 (1982-1983), p. 220.
112 L. HABACHI – Khatâ‘na-Qantir importance
in: Annales du service des antiquités de l'Égypte Tome LII (1954), pp. 443-458.
113 G. POSENER – Littérature et politique dans l'Égypte de la XIIe dynastie
Paris 1956 Éd. Librairie ancienne Honoré Champion pp. 38-40.
114 T. SCHNEIDER - Ausländer in Ägypten während des Mittleren Reiches und der Hysoszeit
in: Ägypten und Altes Testament 42, Wiesbaden 1998 Ed. Harrassowitz Verlag pp. 123-145.
P. VERNUS, J. YOYOTTE - Dictionnaire des pharaons
Paris 1998 Éd. Noésis pp. 63, 185-186.
115 K.S.B. RYHOLT - The Political Situation in Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period
Copenhagen 1997 Ed. The Carsten Niebuhr Intitute of Near Eastern Studies pp. 184-201.
J. VON BECKERATH - Chronologie des Pharaonischen Ägypten
Mainz 1997 ed. Verlag Philipp von Zabern pp. 126-137.
T. SCHNEIDER - Ausländer in Ägypten während des Mittleren Reiches und der Hysoszeit
in: Ägypten und Altes Testament 42, Wiesbaden 1998 Ed. Harrassowitz Verlag pp. 33-54,70.
110
111
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
24
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
The end of the 12th Dynasty (1975-1778) corresponds to the beginning of the 13th
Dynasty (1778-1750?).
The beginning of the 18th Dynasty (1530-1295) corresponds to the end of the 17th
Dynasty (1572?-1530).
The 15th dynasty of the Great Hyksos (1680?-1572?) lasted about 108 years (Turin Kinglist). According to Herodotus, the Egyptians did not want to remember this period
perceived by them as harmful and which had lasted 106 years (The Histories II:128).
According to the "Stela of year 400", found at Tanis, the 15th dynasty (Great Hyksos)
would begin around 1680 BCE, 400 years prior Ramses II (1283-1216).
The three Hyksos dynasties succeeded one another over time without overlapping,
according to the Turin Canon: 14th (1750?-1680?), 15th (1680?-1572?), 16th (1572?-1530).
The Stela of year 400, made under Ramses II, apparently refers to the Sethian
dynasty of the Hyksos, 400 years earlier. The interpretation of this stela is controversial
because it represents the vizier Sety (grandfather of Sety I, father of Ramses II),
commemorating the event116. The Stela seems to have been made by Ramses to support an
honourable affiliation with an ancient dynasty, because the cult of Seth, likened to the Baal
of the Hyksos, was not widespread among the Egyptians. In addition, the system of eras
was unused. It is possible that Ramses had imitated the previous era under the auspices of
Horemheb, a predecessor, because a trial in the year 18 of Ramses II is dated in the year 59
of Horemheb117. Ramses seems to have connected his reign to his predecessor whose name
Sethos I referred to the god Seth. The era of Ramses II would be a continuation of a
prestigious past, which would place the establishment of the cult of Seth/Baal around 1680
BCE, if one counts from Ramses II's reign. In fact, Seth is completely absent from the
titular of Ramses II and its worship appears118 only after the Battle of Kadesh and from the
construction of the temple of Abu Simbel started in year 5 of his reign (in 1279 BCE).
The chronological data on the Hyksos period are few, but they overlap quite well.
The Egyptian priest Manetho, who wrote around 280 BCE, indicates that the Hyksos ruled
Egypt from Pharaoh Toutimaios (Doudimes?) and they were expelled by the Pharaoh
Ahmose (1530-1505). Eusebius (Preparatio Evangelica IX:27:3-5) quotes Artapan's book
entitled: The Jews (written around 200 BCE), explaining that the region above Memphis
was divided into various kingdoms under Pharaoh [Sobekhotep IV] Chenephres (16851676). The information is accurate, because the royal activities during the 13th dynasty are
attested until the end Sobekhotep IV's reign, the most prestigious king of this dynasty119,
further to the north of Thebes rather than Thebes itself (the capital of Egypt remains Lisht
until the end of the dynasty). From this pharaoh, titles acquired a military bearing; they
pertain to security and replace the character of administrative function of titles from the
late Middle Kingdom. Similarly, the evolution of sculpture — relief and full relief — can
follow an obvious loss of interest in quality. All these changes could be explained by the
presence of Asiatic dynasties, especially the Hyksos dynasty.
There is no consensus about the reconstruction of the 13th Dynasty. The only
document available to restore it is the Turin King-list, despite its very incomplete state and
numerous errors120 (durations of missing reigns are supposed to be on average of 5 years =
J.B. PRITCHARD - Ancient Near Eastern Texts
Princeton 1969 Ed. Princeton University Press pp. 252-253.
117 Mes's inscription (Untersuchungen zur Geschichte und Altertumskunde Ägyptens 4 p. 3) describes a complaint declared during the year 18 of
Ramses II, which is finally recorded and dated in the year 59 of Horemheb. The only plausible explanation for this anomaly is to assume
that the reign of Horemheb was extended posthumously, year 28 being followed by years 1-2 of Ramses I, which became years 29-30 of
Horemheb, then by years 1-11 of Sety I (years 31-41 of Horemheb) and finally by years 1-18 of Ramses II (years 42-59 of Horemheb).
118 C. DESROCHES NOBLECOURT – Ramsès II La véritable histoire
Paris 1996 Éd. Pygmalion pp. 185-189,370-372.
119 C. VANDERSLEYEN - L'Egypte et la vallée du Nil Tome 2
Paris 1995 Éd. Presses Universitaires de France pp. 123, 140, 159-160.
120 The last vizier was Iymeru, from Sobekhotep III to Sobekhotep IV, and the next vizier was Yuy, from Ahmose to Thutmose I.
116
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
25
118/24). Regarding the 17th Dynasty the agreement is slightly better121, but the duration of
reigns is far from certain (there is no more vizier between Se-hetepibre and Ahmose)122:
7
8
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
12th Dynasty
Amenemhat IV
Neferusebek
13th Dynasty
Wegaf
Amenemhat V son of Senebef
(Ameny)-Qemau
Sehetepibre I
Iufni
(Ameny-Antef)-Amenemhat VI
Nebnun
Hornedjheritef
Sewadjkare
Nedjemibre
Sobekhotep I
Renseneb
Hor I
(Kaÿ)-Amenemhat VII
(Amenemhat)-Sobekhotep II
Khendjer
Semenkhkare
Antef IV
Seth
Sobekhotep III
Neferhotep I
Sahathor
Sobekhotep IV
Sobekhotep V
Sobekhotep VI
Ibia
Aÿ
Ani
Sewadjtu
Neferhotep II Ined
Hori
Sobekhotep VII
50 ??
Maakherure
Sebekkare
Khutawyre
Sekhemkare
Amenemhat
1
2
3
Seankhibre
Semenkare
4
Se-hetepibre son of Asiatics
(14th Dynasty)
5
Khaankhre
6
7
Awibre
Sedjefakare
8
Sekhemre-Khutawy
9
Weserkare
10
Sehetepkare
[-]ibre
Sekhemre-Sewadjtawy
Khasekhemre
Khaneferre (15th Dynasty)
Merhetepre
Khahetepre
Wahibre
Merneferre
Merhetepre
Seankhenre
Mersekhemre
Sewadjkare
Merkaure
total:
(Apopi)
(16th Dynasty)
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
20
18
19
21
22
23
24
Length
9 years 4 months
3 years 11 months
Reign
1791-1782
1782-1778
2 years 3 months
4? years
[5 years]
[5 years]
1? month
[5 years]
1? month
[5 years]
[5 years]
7 months
3+ years
4 months
[5 years]
7 years
6+ years
4+ years
[5 years]
[5 years]
3+ years
4 years 2 months
11 years 4? months
1+ month
8+ years
4 years 8 months
2 years 2 months
10 years 8 months
23? years 8 months
2 years 4? months
3 years 2+ months
3 years 1 month
5 years
2 years
118 years
1778-1776
1776-1770
1770-1765
1765-1760
1760-1760
1760-1755
1755-1755
1755-1750
1750-1745
1745-1744
1744-1740
1740-1740
1740-1735
1735-1728
1728-1721
1721-1716
1716-1711
1711-1706
1706-1702
1702-1698
1698-1686
1686-1686
1686-1677
1677-1672
1672-1670
1670-1659
1659-1635
1635-1633
1633-1630
1630-1627
1627-1622
1622-1620
[3 years]
(1613-1573)
1576-1573
Sekhemra-wahkhau
Sekhemra-Shedtawy
Sekhemra-wadjkhau
Sekhemra-wepmaat
Nubkheperra
Sekhemra-Heruhermaat
Senakhtenre
Seqenenre
Wadjkheperre
[ 3 years?]
[ 2 years?]
[10 years?]
[ 2 years?]
[10 years?]
[ 1 year?]
11 years
2 years 11 months
1573-1569
1569-1567
1567-1557
1557-1555
1555-1545
1545-1545
1545-1544
1544-1533
1533-1530
Nebpehtyre
Djeserkare
25 years 4 months
20 years 7 months
1530-1505
1505-1484
17th Dynasty
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Rahotep
Sobekemsaf I
Sobekemsaf II
Antef VI
Antef VII
Antef VIII
Ahmose (Iahmes)
Taa
Kamose
18th Dynasty
1 Ahmose
2 Amenhotep I
D. POLZ – New Archaelogical Data from Dra‘ Abu el-Naga and their Historical Implications
in: The Second Intermediate Period (Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 192, 2010) pp. 343-352.
122 K.S.B. RYHOLT - The Political Situation in Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period
Copenhagen 1997 Ed. The Carsten Niebuhr Intitute of Near Eastern Studies pp. 203-204.
121
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
26
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
There is no consensus to precisely restore the chronology of the 15th Dynasty, with
the exception of Apopi, its last Hyksos king, who is well attested and reigned about 4[1]
years123 according to the Turin king-list. The Khyan sealings found at Edfu, in the same
context together with those of Sobekhotep IV (1686-1677), attest a (non-violent !) contact
between the Hyksos (15th Dynasty) and Upper Egypt124 (13th Dynasty) at that time.
Manetho
?
?
Salitis
Bnon
Arpachan
Apophis
?
?
?
No.
14th Dynasty
1 [?]
6 Nehesy
24 [?]
15th Dynasty
1
2 [Šamqenu?]
3 [‘Aper-‘Anati?]
4 [Sakir-Har?]
5 [Khyan?]
6 [Apopi]
- Khamudi
16th Dynasty
2 Djehuty
5 Mentuhotepi
15 [?]
(Turin King-list)
Aasehre
Capital
Length
Tanis
0 year [-]
[ 1 year]
Avaris
[Suserunere]
[Aauserre]
hotepibre
Avaris
Avaris
Sekhemresementawy
Sankhenre
Edfu
Edfu
Reign
1750?
-1680
[12 years]
[12 years]
[12 years]
[12 years]
20? years
4[1 years?]
[1? year]
1680
-
1632-1613
1613-1573
-
3 years
1 year [-]
[ 1 year]
1571-1568
1567-1566
-1530
Many kings not listed in the Turin King-list are difficult to classify among the five
dynasties of the Second Intermediate Period (XIII to XVII), including those who are
considered misclassified. King Aasehre Nehesy, for example, belonging to the 14th dynasty,
is attested by several documents unearthed at Tanis, Tell el-Moqdam, Bubastis, Tell elDaba (Avaris) and Tell el-Hebua (Tjaru) and King Mentuhopeti Seankhere, belonging to
the 16th dynasty, is attested by two big sphinxes, unearthed at Edfu, and a fragmentary stele
found at Karnak on which it is written: [king] beloved by his army, his authority is strong; decisions
which one lives (...) to submit all foreign countries (...) I am a king before Thebes, this my city, mistress of
the whole country, the victorious city (...) more than any other city125. The sentence “submit all foreign
countries” seems to refer to the Asiatics residing in Egypt.
Very surprisingly, Hyksos pharaohs of the
the
th
15 dynasty were considered Egyptian sincee aa
manuscript126, dated to the Third Intermediate
diate
Period, lists two of them in the following order:
rder:
Shareq (3,6), Apopi (3,5), then Ahmose (3,4) and
and
Amenhotep I (3,2). The role and the titularyy of
of
these pharaohs are very particular. Aldred127, sayss in
in
effect: The feudal rulers, who had shared power with
with
Pharaoh at the beginning of the 12th dynasty, had been replaced towards the end of it, by the mayors of
various localities, whose main charge was collect taxes. At the Hyksos Period, these mayors were working
under the direction of the great chancellors of Lower Egypt. Common use had strengthened this traditional
system, and that is why it was adopted by Ahmose who made it supervised by a vizier (t3ty) of Lower
Egypt and a vizier of Upper Egypt, each with their headquarters in the proper capital. In Nubia and in
T. SCHNEIDER -Ausländer in Ägypten während des Mittleren Reiches und der Hysoszeit
in: Ägypten und Altes Testament 42, Wiesbaden 1998 Ed. Harrassowitz Verlag pp. 57-75.
124 N. MOELLER, G. MAROUARD -Discussion of late Middle Kingdom and early Second Intermediate Period History and Chronology
in: Ägypten und Levante XXI (Wien 2011) pp. 108-111.
125 C. VANDERSLEYEN -L'Egypte et la vallée du Nil Tome 2
Paris 1995 Éd. Presses Universitaires de France, pp. 168-188.
126 C. BARBOTIN -Âhmosis et le début de la XVIIIe dynastie
Paris 2008 Éd. Pygmalion pp. 58,59.
127 C. ALDRED -Akhenaton
Paris 1997 Éd. Seuil pp. 132-133.
123
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
Kush, the administration born during the Second Intermediate Period was headed by a prince of Kush
independent, who ruled with the help of officials apparently of Egyptian origin. This administration was
headed by a bureaucratic government headed by a military leader who continued to be called "ruler (ḥq3)"
before becoming "Ruler of Kush" and be appointed by the pharaoh as his viceroy (...) In fact the office of
Pharaoh saw its nature turn with the rivalry that had developed between the Hyksos kings and princes of
Thebes. Thus during the 17th Dynasty, there was, besides the pharaoh, a Ruler of Kush (ḥq3
n Kš)128 in the south, a vassal king regarded as a viceroy of Egypt, and a Hyksos king in the
north (Delta), considered a co-regent because of his royal titulary which appears sometimes
on some scarabs or monuments. However, this criterion is not absolute because some
powerful nomarchs at Abydos129 also adopted this kind of titulary: first name
(enthronement name) then family name (birth name) preceded by the words "son of Râ",
both names being written in cartouches. The Hyksos kings were not vassal kings but coregents because their names on scarabs or monuments are never preceded by the official
title: nsw bity “king of Upper and Lower Egypt” (except Apopi) and they have no document
dated with years of reign (except Apopi, year 33).
The Hyksos kings, such as Egyptian governors, were appointed directly by the
Pharaoh. After the restoration of the unity of Egypt by Mentuhotep II at the 11th Dynasty,
first kings of the 12th dynasty reorganized a provincial administration similar to the one of
the Old Kingdom. Despite the decentralization of the provincial administration, the
Residence still occupied a prominent place in the appointment and training of nomarchs
who often spend a part of their career in the Residence before being appointed in the
provinces130. During the Old Kingdom, a time when Abraham is supposed to have lived,
kings of Egypt were regularly referred to as ‘Residence (ḫnw)’ and sometimes by the word
pharaoh (per-âa) meaning "Great domain131 (pr-‘3)", because Egyptian government was
confused with the place where the king resided. For example, when Sinuhe, an Egyptian
official, arrived in Palestine, a ruler of Upper Retenu (ḥq3 pw n Rtnw ḥrt) who welcomes him
asked: Has something happened to the Residence? (The Tale of Sinuhe §§ 54-58). The Hyksos
kings acted as a representative of the pharaoh. The Egyptian title "representative (idnw)" is
misleading because it might serve to designate any high representative, including the
Pharaoh himself, such as the viceroy of Kush132, which put him almost on a par with the
pharaoh. Horemheb, for example, first ruled Egypt with the title of idnw "representative [of
Pharaoh]" received from his predecessor (Tutankhamun), during the first 14 years of his
reign133, before taking the conventional title ‘King (nsw bity)’. The enthronement of Joseph
in the Bible is a good example of this procedure: And Pharaoh said unto Joseph, See, I have set
thee over all the land of Egypt. And Pharaoh took off his ring from his hand, and put it upon Joseph's
hand, and arrayed him in vestures of fine linen, and put a gold chain about his neck; And he made him to
ride in the second chariot which he had; and they cried before him, Abrek [pay attention?]: and he made
him ruler over all the land of Egypt. And Pharaoh said unto Joseph, I am Pharaoh, and without thee shall
no man lift up his hand or foot in all the land of Egypt. And Pharaoh called Joseph's name
Zaphnathpaaneah [“The god said: He will live”]; and he gave him to wife Asenath [ns-n.t “she belongs to
Neith”] the daughter of Potipherah [p3-di-p3-r‘ “the one has given Ra”] priest of On (iwnw Heliopolis).
S. KUBISCH – Biographies of the Thirteenth to Seventeeth Dynasties
in: The Second Intermediate Period (Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 192, 2010) p. 323.
129 For example these three nomarchs: Wepwawtemsaf, Pentjeny and Senââib.
130 É. MARTINET – Le Nomarque sous l'Ancien Régime
Paris 2011 Éd. Presses de l'université Paris-Sorbonne pp. 233-235.
131 A. ROCCATI – La littérature historique sous l'ancien empire égyptien
in: LAPO 11 Paris 1982 Éd. Cerf pp. 134-135,191-195,309.
132 The Cambridge Ancient History, Volume 2, Part 1
Cambridge 1973 Ed. Cambridge University Press pp. 348-349.
133 W.J. MURNANE – Ancient Egyptian Coregencies
in: Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt Vol. 16 (1979) p. 189.
128
27
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
28
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
And Joseph went out over all the land of Egypt (...) So Joseph went and told Pharaoh, 'My father and
brothers have arrived from Canaan with their flocks and all they have come from the land of Canaan. Here
they are, in the region of Goshen.' He had taken five of his brothers, and he now presented them to Pharaoh
(...) Then Pharaoh said to Joseph: They may stay in the region of Goshen, and if you know of any capable
men among them, you must appoint them chiefs of livestock over what is mine. Jacob and his sons went to
Egypt where Joseph was (Gn 41:41-45;
47:1-6). There is no trace of Joseph
in Egyptian documents134, but the
investiture ceremony is consistent
with Egyptian customs that describe
the enthronement of a vizier, second
person of State (opposite figure),
robed in fine linen, receiving his gold
collar and signet-seal of office135.
The biblical account is consistent with linguistics, geography (the capital of Egypt
was located in the north until early in the 17th dynasty) and timescale, since the date of
Joseph's co-regency (1758-1744) is at the time of Pharaoh Amenemhat VI (1760?-1755?). It
is known that Amenemhat V (1776?-1770?), a predecessor, ruled the north of Egypt,
because a stela to his name has been found in the Nile Delta (in Athribis) and a successor,
Hetepibre Hornedjheritef (1755-1750?), has his name preceded by his affiliation sa aamu
"son of Asiatics (plural)". Also known is the pyramid of King Ameny Aamu. A baton of
command bearing the name Hotepibre was found at Ebla (Syria). On the site of Tell elDab'a (Avaris), Bietak has uncovered136 a vast palace whose existence was brief, a few years
at most, and it had not even been completed. This building dates from the beginning of the
13th Dynasty. Various details — including the discovery of a cylinder seal "Ruler of Retenu"
in a style typically Syrian, lack of foundation deposits, remains of offerings of animals in a
circular pit — are foreign to Egyptian habits and make one think of Asia and a Canaanite
influence. This palace could be the ‘summer residence’ of the king of Egypt son of aamu,
Hetepibre, whose statue was found 100 meters away137. The pharaohs of the 13th dynasty
ruled Lower Egypt so until Pharaoh Sobekhotep IV (1686-1677), but the eastern part of
the Delta was under Asiatic influence. If the Pharaohs of the 13th Dynasty had brief reigns,
their viziers exerted their function over periods apparently longer. However, only few
viziers of the early 13th dynasty, until Sobekhotep IV, are known138.
The very short duration of reign of the kings belonging to the 14th and 16th
dynasties involves more a position of super nomarch than king. Only kings of the 15th
Dynasty have comparable power to the kings of Egypt. The name of Egyptian nomes of
Lower Egypt139 confirm the existence of regions where Asiatics (Canaanites, Syrians,
Israelites, etc.) were inhabiting. For example, the nome No. 8, capital Pithom (Tell elMaskhutah) is called "Oriental harpoon" (ḥww í3bty), the nome No. 13, capital Heliopolis
(El-Matariyah), is called "Orient Prince of Levant" (ḥq3 ‘ndw) and the nome No. 14, capital
Tjaru (Tell Hebua), is called "Orient" (í3b.t). Avaris (Tell el-Dab’a), Bubastis (Tell Basta)
and Tanis (San el-Hagar) were in the northern part of the nome No. 13.
However, Hebrew names were often replaced by Egyptian names.
K.A. KITCHEN – On the Reliability of the Old Testament
Cambridge 2003 Ed. Eerdmans Publishing Company p. 640.
136 Most of sealing impressions found in Avaris bear the name of King Khyan and one possible Apopi (I. FORSTNER-MÜLLER, M.
BIETAK, M. LEHMANN, C. REALI -Report on the Excavations at Tell El-Daba'a 2011).
137 C. VANDERSLEYEN – L'Egypte et la vallée du Nil
Paris 1995 Éd. Presses Universitaires de France p. 129.
138 S. QUIRKE – Middle Kingdom Studies
New Malden 1991 Ed. SIA Publishing pp. 123-139.
139 M. DESSOUDEIX – Chronique de l'Égypte ancienne
Paris 2008 Éd. Actes Sud pp. 755-775.
134
135
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
The remains of Hyksos kings in Egypt are few for at
least 2 reasons: these foreign kings, having had only a limited
power in Egypt (mainly in the Delta), would hardly have
constructed monuments, in addition, the departure of the
Hyksos into Palestine having affected the following pharaohs
very badly all their works were either destroyed or severely
mutilated as shows this statue (opposite figure) of a Hyksos
dignitary, dated in the beginning of the 14th dynasty, identified
thanks to his hair and the cross on his shoulder140. The
Museum of Antiquities in Cairo also has a Middle Kingdom
funerary mask141 of the Hyksos period from which identifying
indicia are gone, however the outstanding representation of a
beard on a sarcophagus is a typically Semitic practice.
According to Manfred Bietak142, Avaris, the capital of
the Hyksos (250 ha), was composed of at least 30,000
inhabitants, most of them being Asiatics. It appears that they
collaborated harmoniously with the Egyptians. Archaeological
excavations have also revealed their link with the south of
Palestine143. Thus, the weapons found in the tombs of Tell el
Dab‘a (site of Avaris) have a Syro-Palestinian origin for 80%
of them. Similarly, 74% of the pottery had been imported
from Southern Palestine. The Hyksos did not mummify their
dead, unlike the Egyptians, thus indicating a different
conception of the afterlife. The information given by Josephus has proved so reliable,
again, the biblical details regarding the manufacture of bricks made of clay and straw, the
frames of acacia, are indeed typical of Egypt, but unknown in Palestine. There was found at
Avaris the effigy of Imeni (looks like Amen "faithful"), a Hyksos officer (recognizable by
BASOR 281 (1991) pp. 34,49,50.
Refeenced TR 7.9.33.1.
142 M. BIETAK – From Where Came the Hyksos and Where did they go?
in: The Second Intermediate Period (Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 192, 2010) pp. 148-149.
143 C. BOOTH - The Hyksos Period in Egypt
Buckinghamshire 2005 Ed. Shire Publications pp. 1-53.
140
141
29
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
30
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
his beard), who seems proud to be Asiatic. On a small obelisk from Serabit el-Khadim we
can see representations of Western Asiatic soldiers holding duckbill axes.
Geographical and chronological data144 provided by biblical and Egyptian accounts
(a people from Syria-Palestine arrived in Egypt around 1750 BCE and left about 1530
BCE) so well overlap. The archaeological reports of Bietak show that Semites of SyriaPalestine reached Avaris from the 13th dynasty, then disappeared at the beginning of the
18th dynasty. Historical evidence of the Hyksos, despite some uncertainties and
inconsistencies are therefore quite consistent145.
What was the language of the Hyksos and what was their religion? Analysis of their
146
names allows one to answer these two questions. The native language of the Hyksos
would have been Old Canaanite and they (for the most part) would have worshipped Baal
and not Seth, its Egyptian counterpart, because no theophoric name refers to Seth. For
example, several name include the term “baal” such as Baal-Tuya or [Ab]i-baal. This is
particularly evident among the names of the Hyksos rulers147:
1)
2)
3)
4)
5)
1) Hyksos Sakar-El / Sokar-her (s-k-r-h-r)
2) Aper-Baal (‘pr-b-‘-3-r)
3) Hyksos Aper-Anati (‘pr-‘-n-ti)
4) Yaqub-El / Yaqub-her (y-‘-q-b-h-r)
5) Yaqub-Baal (y-‘-q-b-‘-r)
W.G. DEVER/ J.M. WEINSTEIN - The Chronology of Syria-Palestine in the Second Millenium B.C.E.
in: Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 288 (1992) pp. 1-21; 27-38.
D. HENIGE - Comparative Chronology and the Ancient Near East
in: Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 261 (1986) pp. 57-65.
145 J. YOYOTTE - Dictionnaire de la civilisation égyptienne
Paris 1998 Éd. Hazan pp. 108,109.
J. ASSMANN - Moïse l'Égyptien
Paris 2001 Éd. Flammarion pp. 76-78.
D. REDFORD - The Hyksos Invasion in History and Tradition
in: Orientalia 39 (1970) pp. 1-51.
146 W.C. HAYES – A Papyrus of the Late Middle Kingdom in the Brooklyn Museum
Brooklyn 1955 Ed. The Brooklyn Museum pp. 87-99.
147 M. DESSOUDEIX – Chronique de l'Égypte ancienne
Paris 2008 Éd. Actes Sud pp. 221-223.
144
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
31
Some Hyksos names transcribed into hieroglyphs are of Semitic origin (especially
those beginning with y)148, but others are Egyptian. It is often difficult to separate them
because the phonetic transcription of these names is often approximate and fluctuating:
Y-‘-q-b-h-r
Y-‘-q-b-‘-r
Mri-ib-R‘
Š-š-i
Y-k-b-‘-r
M’-ib-R‘
Y-n-s-s [idn]
I-p-p-i
I-p-p-y
a. Yaqub-Baal (y-‘-q-b-‘-r) is clearly of Canaanite origin because it has no meaning in
Egyptian, but it means: "Supplanter [is the] Master" in Old Hebrew149. It should be
noted that Ya‘qub-El (Ia-aḫ-qu-ub-el) appears repeatedly in Lower Mesopotamia at the
time of King Manana150, a contemporary of Sumu-El (1799-1771), a king of Larsa151.
b. Yaqub-El / Yaqub-her (y-‘-q-b-h-r but y-‘-q-b-i-r in Thutmose III's list) is of Canaanite
origin but its meaning is less clear: "Supplanter [is] God" in Old Hebrew or "Jacob [is]
glad" in Egyptian. The first meaning seems more likely, because Baal was considered
interchangeable with El. Similarly, vocalization Sakar-El "Wage [of] God" in Old
Hebrew is more appropriate than Sokar-her "Sokar [is] glad" in Egyptian. The Sakar
name appears in Is-sakar “There is a wage [of God]”, a son of Jacob (Gn 30:18).
c. Aper-Baal (‘pr-b-l) is the name of the Lord Chancellor on the jamb of a chapel door
found at Tell Hebua152 (dated to the Second Intermediate Period), its meaning could be
“Adornment [of] Baal” in Egyptian or “Calf [of] Baal” in Hebrew (Gn 25:4). Similarly,
Aper-Anati (‘pr-‘-n-ti) could mean “Adornment [of] Anat” or “Calf [of] Anat”.
d. Khyan (ḫ-y-3-n) means nothing in Egyptian but "brotherly (akhyan)" in Old Hebrew,
with an aphaeresis of the initial vowel (1Ch 7:19).
e. Apopi (i-‡-p-p-i). The fact that the name is usually written with the syllabic group i-‡
would rather suggest that is was foreign in origin, just as all the other known names of
kings and their treasurers of this Dynasty153. It means nothing in Egyptian, but "splendid
(yepepia)" in Hebrew (Jr 46:20), close to the name Joppa "beautiful" (Jos 19:46) or to IpShemu-Abi (’i-p-š-mw-’i-b-iḥ), a king of Byblos (1790-1765) whose Semitic name means:
“beautiful is the name of my father154”. The name Apopi also appears in the Jerusalem
Talmud (Nedarim 42c; 11:1)155 which states that a vow made on behalf of Apopi ()איפופי
of Israel is valid. Some Jewish amulets156 written in Greek are dedicated to IAO YPEPI
"Iao Apopi" or to IAO CABAO MOUCE "Iao Sabaoth Moses".
f. Meribre Sheshi (Mri-ib-R‘ Š-š-i) is Egytian and means "Beloved; heart [of] Ra; refined
gold?". Yaneses (y-n-s-s) means nothing in Egyptian but “he will be exalted” in Hebrew.
J.E. HOCH – Semitic Words in Egyptian Texts of the New Kingdom and Third Intermediate Period
Princeton 1994 Ed. Princeton University Press pp. 50-58.
149 According to the biblical text Jacob (1878-1731) lived in Egypt (Gn 47:28), his son calling God "the powerful one of Jacob" (Gn
49:24), he also spent 20 years (1801-1781) near Haran in Mesopotamia (Gn 30:25; 31:41).
150 R. DE VAUX - Histoire ancienne d'Israël des origines à l'installation en Canaan
Paris 1986 Éd. Gabalda pp. 186,192.
151 S.D. SIMMONS – Early Old Babylonian Texts
in: Journal of Cuneiform Studies 14 (1960) pp. 27,87,122.
152 M. ABD EL-MAKSOUD – Tell Heboua (1981-1991)
Paris 1998 Éd. Recherche sur les Civilisations pp. 271-272.
153 K.S.B. RYHOLT - The Political Situation in Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period
Copenhagen 1997 Ed. The Carsten Niebuhr Intitute of Near Eastern Studies p. 129.
154 P. MONTET – Le drame d’Avaris. Essai sur la pénétration des Sémites en Egypte
Paris 1940, Éd. Librairie orientaliste Paul Geuthner, pp. 37-39.
155 J. BONSIRVEN – Textes rabbiniques des deux premiers siècles chrétiens
Rome 1955 Éd. Pontificio Istituto Biblico p. 1376.
156 E.R. GOODENOUGH – Jewish Symbols in the Greco-Roman Period
New York 1953 Ed. Pantheon Books vol. 2 p. 220, vol. 3 n°1027, n°1135.
148
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
32
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
CHRONOLOGY OFTHE 12TH DYNASTY
The Sothic rising, dated IV Peret 16 in year 7 of Senwosret III, can be dated around
1850 BCE by astronomy because at that time the Sothic rising took place July 11 in Thebes
(longitude 32°39' E, latitude 25°42' N) and 15/16 July in Memphis (longitude 31°15' E,
latitude 29°52' N), which fixes the heliacal rising of Sirius either in 1849 BCE +/- 4 years in
Thebes or 1865 BCE +/- 4 in Memphis157. The arcus visionis should be 8.3° instead of 8.5°
because around 1850 BCE the angle between the Sun and Sirius at its rising was a little
higher than today.
arcus visionis 8.3°
Memphis (29°52')
Thebes (25°42')
Elephantine (24°)
Sothic rising (IV Peret 16)
15 July
11 July
9 July
year 7 of Senwosret III
1865-1862
1849-1846
1841-1838
year 1 of Senwosret III
1872-1869
1855-1852
1848-1845
It is possible to refine this dating using numerous lunar dates158 that span the 19
years of the reign of Senwosret III, followed by the 45 years of Amenemhat III and which
fit according to the lunar cycle of 25 years (dates highlighted hereafter)159. They are offset
by 1 day compared with those of Parker who translated the word "until" in an inclusive
meaning and not exclusive160. The few irregularities prove that they are observed cycles and
not calculated cycles161. The 19-year reign of Senwosret III precede the 45 years of
Amenemhat III, his successor, without official co-regency162.
The lunar dates enable one to choose between Thebes and Memphis. The lunar
cycle of 25 years starting at I Akhet 1 and the full moon163 on November 30, 1857 BCE,
the Sothic rising of Year 7 dated in 1848 BCE is the only one located in a calculated area
for Sothic rising (1849-1846). The one dated 25 years earlier (1865-1862) does not fit in the
previous cycle (starting December 6, 1882 BCE), unless accepting 1 day of error on all
lunar dates (lunar cycle of 25 years starting at I Akhet 2* in november 1871).
The Sothic rising of year 7 of Senwosret III coincided with a 1st lunar crescent
(dated July 11, 1848 BCE), which may have been a remarkable event, worthy of notice (the
IV Peret 1 coinciding with the full moon of June 26, 1848 BCE). The Sothic rising of
Senwosret III was thus observed at Thebes. Astronomy fixing the year 7 of Senwosret III
in 1848 BCE it is possible to date the 12th dynasty through the duration of the reigns
(known for this period, reigns starting at year 0) were represented in the following table:
Colour legend
*
Meaning
Date of first lunar day in the (civil) calendar.
Date of first lunar day shifted by 1 day compared to the theoretical cycle.
Calculated area of the heliacal rising of Sirius.
Day dated IV Peret 1 year 7 of Senwosret III.
Reign of Senwosret III
Reign of Amenemhat III
http://www.imcce.fr/fr/grandpublic/phenomenes/sothis/index.php
R.A. PARKER - The Calendars of Ancient Egypt
in: Studies in Ancient Oriental Civilization N°26 (1950) Ed. University of Chicago pp. 63-67.
159 U. LUFT – Die chronologische Fixierung des ägyptischen Mittleren Reiches
Wien 1992 Ed. Akademie der Wissenschaften pp. 150,151.
R. KRAUSS - Arguments in Favor of a Low Chronology for the Middle and New Kingdom
in: The Synchronisation of Civilisations in the Eastern (M. Bietak 2003) pp. 175-197
160 L.E. ROSE – The Astronomical Evidence for Dating the End of the Middle Kingdom
in: Journal of Near Eastern Studies 53 (1994) pp. 247,248.
161 Lunar date I Akhet 19, year 31 of Amenemhat III, is wrong because it would involve a 31-day month, this date should be corrected in
I Akhet 20.
162 C. OBSOMER - Sésostris Ier. Étude chronologique et historique du règne
Bruxelles 1995 Éd. Connaissance ancienne de l'Égypte p. 149.
163 http://www.imcce.fr/fr/grandpublic/phenomenes/phases_lune/index.php
157
158
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
(2)
1882
1881
1880
Senwosret III
1879
1878
1877
1876
1875
1874
1873
1872
1871
1870
1869
1868
1867
1866
1865
1864
1863
1862
1861
Amenemhat III 1860
1859
1858
1857
(1)
1857
1856
1855
1854
1853
1852
1851
1850
1849
1848
1847
1846
1845
1844
1843
1842
1841
1840
1839
1838
1837
1836
1835
1834
1833
1832
1831
1830
1829
1828
1827
1826
1825
1824
1823
1822
1821
1820
1819
1818
1817
1816
1815
1814
1813
1812
1811
1810
1809
1808
1807
1806
1805
1804
1803
1802
1801
1800
I
AKHET
II III
Nov Dec Jan
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
IV
I
PERET
II III
IV
Feb Mar Apr May Jun
1 30 29 29
19 19 18 18
9
8
8
7
28 27 27 26
17 17 16 16
6
6
6
5
25 25 24 24
15 14 14 13
4
4
3
3
23 23 22 22
12 12 11 11
2
1
1 30
21 20 20 19
10
9
9
9
29 28 28 27
18 18 17 17
8
7
7
6
26 26 26 25
16 15 15 14
5
5
4
4
24 24 23 23
13 13 13 12
3
2
2
1
22 21 21 20
11 11 10 10
1 30 29 29
19 19 18 18
9
8
8
7
28 27 27 26
17 17 16 16
6
6
6
5
25 25 *25 24
15 14 14 13
4
4
3
3
23 23 22 22
12 12 11 11
2
1
1 30
21 20 20 19
10
9
9
9
29 28 28 27
18 18 17 17
8
7
7
6
26 26 26 25
16 15 15 14
*6
5
4
4
24 24 23 23
13 13 13 12
3
2
2
1
22 21 21 20
11 11 10 10
1 30 29 29
19 *20 *19 *19
9 *9
8
7
28 27 27 26
17 17 16 16
6
6
6
5
25 25 24 24
28 28
18 17
7
6
26 25
15 15
5
4
23 23
13 12
2
2
21 21
10 10
30 29
19 18
8
8
27 27
16 16
6
5
25 24
14 14
3
3
22 22
12 11
1
1
20 19
9
9
28 28
18 17
7
6
26 25
15 15
5
4
23 23
13 12
2
2
21 21
10 10
30 29
19 18
8
8
27 27
16 16
6
5
25 24
14 14
3
3
22 22
12 11
1
1
20 19
9
9
28 28
18 *18
7
6
26 25
15 15
5
4
23 23
27 27
17 16
6
6
25 24
14 14
4
3
23 22
12 11
1
1
20 20
10
9
28 28
18 17
7
7
26 26
15 15
5
4
24 23
13 13
2
2
21 21
11 10
30 29
19 18
8
8
27 27
17 16
6
6
25 24
14 14
4
3
23 22
12 11
1
1
20 20
10
9
28 28
18 17
7
7
26 26
15 15
5
4
24 23
13 13
*3
2
21 21
11 10
30 29
19 18
8
8
27 27
17 *17
6
6
25 24
14 14
4
3
23 22
33
I
Jul
26
16
5
24
13
3
22
11
30
19
9
27
17
6
25
14
4
23
12
1
20
10
29
18
7
26
16
5
24
13
3
22
11
30
19
9
27
17
6
25
14
4
23
12
1
20
10
29
18
*8
26
16
5
24
13
3
22
SHEMU
II III IV 5
Aug Sep Oct
26
15
5
23
13
2
21
10
29
19
8
27
16
6
25
14
3
22
12
1
20
9
28
18
7
26
15
5
23
13
2
21
10
29
19
8
27
16
6
25
14
3
22
12
1
20
9
28
18
7
26
15
5
23
13
2
21
25
15
4
23
12
2
21
10
29
18
8
27
16
5
24
14
3
22
11
1
19
9
28
17
6
25
15
4
23
12
2
21
10
29
18
8
27
16
5
24
14
3
22
11
1
19
9
28
17
6
25
15
4
23
12
2
21
25
14
4
23
12
1
20
10
28
18
7
26
15
5
24
13
2
21
11
30
19
8
27
17
6
25
14
4
23
12
1
20
10
28
18
7
26
15
5
24
13
2
21
11
30
19
8
27
17
6
25
14
4
23
12
1
20
3
1
4
2
3
1
4
2
3
1
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
34
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
CHRONOLOGY OF THE 13TH AND 17TH DYNASTIES
The reign of Senwosret III (1855-1836) enables an anchoring of the chronology of
the 12 dynasty obtained from the following documents164:
th
Pharaoh
Turin King List
Highest date
12th Dynasty
Amenemhat I
[-]9
30
Senwosret I
45
45
Amenemhat II
3[-]
35
Senwosret II
1[-]
8
Senwosret III
19 ?
19
Amenemhat III
4[-]
46
Amenemhat IV
9 years 4 m. 27 d.
9
Neferusebek
3 years 10 m. 24 d.
3
Total: 213 years 1 m. 16 d.
13th Dynasty
14th Dynasty
15th Dynasty
16th Dynasty
17th Dynasty
18th Dynasty
Manetho
Length of reign
16
46
38
48
8
8
8
4
176
29 years
45 years
38 years
8 years
19 years
45 years
9 years 4 m. 27 d.
3 years 10 m. 24 d.
197 years
Reign
1975-1778
1975-1946
1946-1901
1901-1863
1863-1855
1855-1836
1836-1791
1791-1782
1782-1778
1778
260
-
-1530
1530-1295
The 13th Dynasty presents many problems165, not just from the point of view of
genealogical reconstruction, but also even from that of the royal succession. The key source
is the Turin Canon — a Ramesside compilation of royal names, successions and reign
lengths — although analysis is hampered by the badly damaged state of the surviving
papyrus copy. Although our knowledge can be augmented by contemporary monuments,
there remain many gaps and uncertainties in the various reconstructions that have been put
forward, with no real consensus on some of the more opaque parts of the dynasty. A
feature of the number of the kings of the 13th Dynasty is their length and formulation, a
good example being 'Ameny-Inyotef-Amen-emhat'. It is now becoming recognized that
such 'names' actually contain the name of the king himself, together with that of his father
and, in cases such as this, his grandfather as well. We should thus read here: 'Amenemhat
(VI), (son of) Inyotef, ([grand]son of) Ameny (= Amenemhat V)'; this kind of arrangement
is known as a "filiative nomen', and is thus of very considerable help in reconstructing the
notoriously opaque genealogy of the dynasty. On the other hand, a further suggestion that
any king without such a form of nomen should be judged to be without royal ancestry and
thus a 'usurper' is certainly stretching the subject too far. Using the criteria of their nomina,
the first two kings of the dynasty, Sobekhotep I and Sonbef ('Amenemhat-Sobkhotep' and
'Amenemhat-Sonbef respectively), are probably to be recognized as the sons of
Amenemhat IV, penultimate ruler of the 12th Dynasty. In support of the suggestion that
Amenemhat IV was of non-royal birth, there is the fact that the previously untitled mother
of the Overseer of the Fields Ankhu A suddenly became a King's Sister late in the 12th
Dynasty, suggesting that her royal brother had not previously been a King's Son. The 13th
Dynasty seems to have had around 61 kings.
Some lists of Pharaohs appear in a few tombs but there ranking is sometimes
surprising. For example, on the scene called "Lords of the West" from Inherkau's tomb
(TT359) we see on the top row from the right then on the bottom row from the right:
C. VANDERSLEYEN - L'Egypte et la vallée du Nil Tome 2
Paris 1995 Éd. Presses Universitaires de France pp. 43-122.
165 A. DODSON, D. HYLTON – The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt
London 2010 Ed. Thames & Hudson Ltd, pp. 100-129.
164
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
35
1) King Amenhotep I, 2) King Ahmose I, 6) King Siamun A, 11) Crown Prince Ahmose Sapaïr
1) Ahmes-Nefertiry, 2) King Ramses I, 3) King Mentuhotep II, 4) King Amenhotep II, 5) King Taa
Seqenenre, 6) Crown prince Ra(?)mose, 7) King Ramses IV, 8) King unknown, 9) King Thutmose I.
It is assumed that the 17th dynasty is a continuation of the 13th dynasty. Its
reconstruction is easier. However the order of its 9 kings remains controversial166. As there
were 50 kings in the 13th Dynasty and 9 kings in the 17th, the average duration of each reign
is approximately 4 years = (1778 – 1530)/(50 + 9). As we know the duration of the last
two reigns (3 years for Kamose and 11 years Seqenenre Taa), the 17th dynasty had to have
started in 1572 (= 1530 + 3 + 11 + 7x4). The average of 4 years may be adjusted based on
the number of dated documents and highest dates167:
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
1
17th Dynasty
Rahotep
Sobekemsaf I
Sobekemsaf II
Antef VI
Antef VII
Antef VIII
Ahmose (Iahmes)
Taa
Kamose
18th Dynasty
Ahmose
highest date
Sekhemra-wahkhau
Sekhemra-Shedtawy
Sekhemra-wadjkhau
Sekhemra-wepmaat
Nubkheperra
Sekhemra-Heruhermaat
Senakhtenre
Seqenenre
Wadjkheperre
Nebpehtyre
7
3
0
11
3
[Adjusted duration]
[ 3 years]
[ 2 years]
[10 years]
[ 2 years]
[ 9 years]
[ 1 year]
11 years
2 years 11 months
Reign
1572-1568
1568-1566
1566-1556
1556-1554
1554-1545
1545-1545
1545-1544
1544-1533
1533-1530
25 years 4 months
1530-1505
The chronology of the 13th dynasty (1778-1472) is much more uncertain, because
the position of the first 35 kings is approximate and the last 15 kings are not identifiable in
the present state of documentation. The choice made here is that of Aidan Dodson who
rearranged the Turin King List based on genealogical links between kings. Unknown
durations have been replaced by an average value of 4 years, except for kings No. 7 to 10
because Nebnuni and Iufeni having left no relics168 we can assume that their reigns were
short. The reign of Sihornedjherkef Hotepibre having several prestigious relics, we can
assume that he easily exceeded the average of 4 years. In addition, there are two
synchronisms with Byblos Rulers (Yakin-el and Yantin-Ammu) and a King of Mari (ZimriLim) that allows verifying the reliability of the chronological anchorage.
D. POLZ – New Archaelogical Data from Dra‘ Abu el-Naga and their Historical Implications
in: The Second Intermediate Period (Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 192, 2010) pp. 343-352.
167 K.S.B. RYHOLT – The Political Situation in Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period c. 1800-1500 B.C.
Copenhagen 1997, Ed. Carsten Niebuhr Institute Publications Vol. 20 pp. 203-204.
168 S. QUIRKE – Ways to Measure Thirteen Dynasty Royal Power from Inscribed Objects
in: The Second Intermediate Period (Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 192, 2010) pp. 55-68.
166
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
36
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
n°
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
13th Dynasty
Sobkhotep I
Sonbef
Amenemhet V
Qemaw
Amenemhet VI
Nebnuni
Iufeni
Sihornedjherkef
Sobkhotep II
Reniseneb
Hor I
Amenemhet VII
Wegaf
Khendjer
Imyremeshaw
Antef V
Seth
Sobkhotep III
Neferhotep I
Sihathor
Sobkhotep IV
Sobkhotep V
Sobkhotep VI
Ibiaw
Aya
Ini I
Sewadjtu
Ined
Hori
Sobkhotep VII
Ini II
Neferhotep II
Mentuhotep V
Ibi
Hor(..?)
Sankhptahi
Senebmiu
Sekhemrekhutawy
Sekhemkare
Nerikare
Sekhemkare
Sankhibre
Semenkare
Hotepibre
Sewadjkare
Nedjemibre
Khaankhre
Awibre
Sedjefakare
Khutawyre
Woserkare
Semenkhkare
Sehotepkare
Meribre
Sekhemresewadjtawy
Khasekhemre
Menwadjre
Khaneferre
Merhotepre
Khahotepre
Wahibre
Merneferre
Merhotepre
Sankhenre
Mersekhemre
Sewadjkare
Merkawre
Mer[...]re
Merkheperre
Merkare
Sewedjare
[...]maatre
[...]webenre
Se[...]kare
Seheqenre
-
Vizier
Length
‘Ankhu
3+ years
Khemenes
4+ years
?
6 years
?
4? years
?
[4 years]
?
[4 years]
?
[- year]
?
[- year]
14th Dynasty
[12 years]
?
[2 years]
?
7 months
?
6+ years
?
4 months
?
[4 years]
?
7 years
?
2 years 3 months
?
4+ years
?
[4 years]
?
[4 years]
?
3+ years
Iymeru
4 years 2 months
Iymeru
11 years 4? months
Iymeru
1+ month
Iymeru
8+ years
15th Dynasty
[4 years]
4 years 8 months
10 years 8 months
13? years 8 months
2 years 4? months
3 years 2+ months
3 years 1 month
5 years
2 years
[4 years]
[4 years]
[4 years]
[4 years]
[4 years]
[4 years]
[4 years]
[4 years]
[4 years]
[4 years]
[4 years]
[4 years]
[4 years]
[4 years]
[4 years]
[4 years]
[4 years]
Reign
1778-1775
1775-1771
1771-1765
1765-1761
1761-1757
1757-1753
1753-1753
1753-1753
1753-1741
1741-1739
1739-1739
1739-1733
1733-1733
1733-1729
1729-1722
1722-1720
1720-1716
1716-1712
1712-1708
1708-1705
1705-1701
1701-1690
1690-1690
1690-1682
1682-1678
1678-1673
1676-1665
1665-1652
1652-1650
1650-1647
1647-1644
1644-1639
1639-1637
1637-1633
1633-1629
1629-1625
1625-1621
1621-1617
1617-1613
1613-1609
1609-1605
1605-1601
1601-1597
1597-1593
1593-1589
1589-1585
1585-1581
1581-1577
1577-1573
1573-1569
It is difficult to assess the accuracy about those periods of reigns (for the first 35
kings), but a value around +/- 10 years would seem reasonable. There are several
synchronisms between the Egyptian kings and the Byblos Rulers169 for which the duration
is based only on assumptions. Assuming an exact contemporaneity, the death of AbiShemu had to have occurred around 1790 BCE (death of Amenemhat III). The living
P. GERSTENBLITH – The Levant at the Beginning of the Middle Bronze Age
Winona Lake 1983 Ed. Eisenbrauns pp. 101-107.
169
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
37
conditions of Byblos Rulers at the time of these Egyptian kings being quite similar one can
assume a period of about 25 years of reign (= 197/8). The historical sequence170 is: 1) AbiShemu I (Tomb I), 2) Ip-Shemu-Abi (Tomb II), 3) Yakin-el (Tomb III), a contemporary of
Sihornedjherkef Hotepibre, and 4) Ilimi-Yapi (Tomb IV). Yatin-Ammu's father was Yakin.
One can also assume that Neferhotep I was a contemporary of Yantin-Ammu since there
was found at Byblos a relief showing Pharaoh Neferhotep I171 opposite Prince Yantin(‘Ammu) of Byblos. In addition, in a letter dated the 9th year of Zimri-Lim (1680-1667),
king of Mari, the name Yantin-Ammu appears as the donor of a gold cup. The following
chronological reconstruction shows that the agreement is good for +/- 10 years.
Tomb King of Byblos
I
Abi-Shemu
II
Ip-Shemu-Abi
III
IV
Yakin-el
Ilimi-yapi ?
Yakin?
Yantin-Ammu
?
Reign
1815-1790
1790
-1765
1765-1740
1740-1720
1720
-1695
1695
-
King of Egypt
[25] Amenemhat III
[25] Amenemhat IV
Neferusebek
[25] [Hotepibre
[20]
[25] Seth
Sobekhotep III
[25] Neferhotep I
Sobekhotep IV
Sobekhotep V
Sobekhotep VI
-1670
Iaib
Reign
#
1836-1791 45
1791-1782
9
1782-1778
4
1753-1741 [12]
1708-1705
1705-1701
1701-1690
1690-1690
1690-1682
1682-1678
1678-1673
4
12
9
5
2
11
King of Mari
?
?
?
?
?
Yahdun-Lîm
Reign
1716
-1699
Sûmû-Yamam 1699-1697
Samsî-Addu
1697-1687
Yasmah-Addu 1687-1680
Zimrî-Lîm
1680
-1667
CHRONOLOGY OF THE 14TH, 15TH AND 16TH DYNASTIES
Conspicuously few monuments of the 14th Dynasty are known today. The entire
dynasty is represented by no more than about ten royal monuments and, except for two, all
bear the name of Nehsy (either as king or king's son) who had a reign of less than one year
according to the Turin King-list. This circumstance is difficult to reconcile with the fact
that the 14th Dynasty was situated in the most fertile lands in Egypt and had intensive trade
with both Canaan, Thirteenth Dynasty Egypt, and Nubia. Apart from scarabs and a few
seal-impressions, the 14th Dynasty is attested outside the Turin King-list only by
monuments of its second king, Nehsy, from the eastern Delta, none of which were found
in precisely datable contexts. For its 51 or more rulers, the King-list preserves a total of 12
years, 2 months, and 23 days of rule in 18 entries, with no reign longer than three years172
(the five first rulers are lost). Thus the total duration of the 14th dynasty would be about 34
years (= 51x12/18). Several reigns have durations of only a few months which shows an
abnormal process. The first Asiatic king had to have appeared at the time of Hotepibre173
under the prenomen "the Asiatics, son of Hornedjherkef", Hornedjherkef (1753-1741)
being a king of the 13th Dynasty. The last king of the 14th Dynasty had to have coincided
with the first king of the 15th Dynasty (the Great Hyksos)? According to the Jewish
historian Artapan (around 200 BCE) quoted by Eusebius (Preparatio Evangelica IX:27:3-5)
the region above Memphis was divided into various kingdoms under Pharaoh [Sobekhotep
IV] Chenephres (1690-1682). The information is accurate, because the royal activities
during the 13th dynasty are attested until the end Sobekhotep IV's reign, the most
prestigious king of this dynasty, further to the north of Thebes rather than Thebes itself.
L. NIGRO – The Eighteen Century BC Princes of Byblos and Ebla and the Chronology of the Middle Bronze Age
in: Baal Hors-Série VI (Beirut 2009) pp. 159-175.
171 Two Scarabs of Neferhotep I were also found at Tell el-Ajjul.
172 J.P. ALLEN – The Second Intermediate Period in the Turin King-List
in: The Second Intermediate Period (Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 192, 2010) pp. 1-6.
173 K.S.B. RYHOLT – Hotepibre, a Supposed Asiatic King in Egypt with Relations to Ebla
in: Bulletin of the American schools of Oriental Research No. 311 (1998) pp. 1-6.
170
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
38
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
We can reconstruct the reign of the first five kings of the 14th dynasty using the
number of seals and assuming a constant uttering each year (this method of counting is
however uncertain, mainly for Sheshi)174. We obtain an average of c. 1 seal per month:
King of Egypt (14th Dynasty)
Yakbim Sekhaenre
Ya‘ammu Nubwoserre
Qareaḫ Khawoserre
‘Ammu Ahotepre
Sheshi Maaibre
Total
13th Dynasty
No. [Si]hornedjherkef Hotepibre
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
45
duration
5-16 years
1-4 years
1-4 years
2-8 years
13-53 years
22-85
average
10 years
2 years
3 years]
5 years
33 years
53 years
error
+/- 5 years
+/- 2 years
+/- 2 years
+/- 3 years
+/- 20 years
Length
[Yakbim]
[Ya‘ammu]
[Qareaḫ]
[‘Ammu]
[Sheshi]
[Nehsy]
[-]
[-]
[-]
[-]
[-]
[-]
[-]
[-]
[-]
[-]
[-]
[-]
[-]
[-]
[-]
[-]
[-]
[-]
[-]
[-]
Sobkhotep IV Khaneferre
Seals
123
26
30
62
396
637
14th Dynasty
[Sekhaenre]
[Nubwoserre]
[Khawoserre]
[Ahotepre]
[Maaibre]
[Asehre]
Khakherewre
Nebefawre
Sehebre
Merdjefare
Sewadjkare
Nebdjefare
Webenre
[.........]
[...]djefare
[...Jwebenre
Awibre
Heribre
Nebsenre
[.........]
Sekheperenre
Djedkherewre
Sankhibre
Nefertumre
Sekhem[...]re
[-]
15th Dynasty
Reign
(1753-1741)
[10 years]
1750-1740
[ 2 years]
1740-1738
[ 3 years]
1738-1735
[ 5 years]
1735-1730
[33 years]
1730-1697
[6 m.] 3 d.
1697-1697
[6 m.] 3 d.
1697-1696
1 year 6 m. 15 d. 1696-1694
[3 years] 1 d.
1694-1691
[3 years]
1691-1688
1 year
1688-1687
1 year
1687-1686
[6 m.]
1686-1686
[1 year]
1686-1685
4 m.
1685-1685
3 m.
1685-1685
1 m.? 18 d.
1685-1685
1 m.? 29 d.
1685-1685
5 m. 20 d.
1685-1684
21-24 d.
1684-1684
2 m. 1-5 d.
1684-1684
2 m. 5 d.
1684-1684
19 d.
1684-1684
18 d.
1684-1684
[2 m.]
1684-1684
1684-1680
[2 m.]
1680-1680
(1690-1682)
The 15th dynasty is better documented because its total duration is 10[8] years,
according to the Turin King List or 106 years, according to Herodotus (The Histories
II:128). The beginning of the dynasty is likely Sobekhotep IV (1690-1682). The Stela of the
year 400, made under Ramses II, apparently refers to the Sethian dynasty of the Great
Hyksos, 400 years earlier. The Stele seems to have been made by Ramses to support an
honourable affiliation with an ancient dynasty, because the cult of Seth, likened to the Baal
of the Hyksos, was not widespread among the Egyptians. He seems to have connected his
Obviously there is a considerable margin of error involved in such statistical calculations. This may be illustrated through King Ibiaw
and his successor Aya (13th Dynasty), both of whose exact reign-lengths are preserved in the Turin King-list. Ibiaw ruled 11 years and is
attested by 13 seals (average of c. 1 seal per year), while Aya ruled 24 (or 14) years and is attested by 63 seals (average of c. 2 ½ seals per
year). Calculating the reign of Ibiaw by the average for Aya would suggest a reign of 5 years for Ibiaw (vs. an actual length of 11 years),
and vice versa a reign of 52 ½ years for Aya (vs. an actual length of 24/14 years). However, since this approach seems at present to be the
only means by which a rough idea of the individual reign-lengths of the first five 14th Dynasty kings can be achieved, it has nevertheless
been pursued. Neferhotep I (11 years), Sobkhotep IV (min. 9 years), Ibiaw (11 years), Aya (24/14 years), Khyan (20/10 years), Apopi (40
years), and Nebiryrau (27 years): c. 288 seals and a total reign-length of more than 130 years.
174
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
39
reign to his predecessor whose name Sethos I referred to the god Seth. The era of Ramses
II would have been a continuation of a prestigious past, which would place the
establishment of the cult of Seth/Baal around 1680 BCE, if one counts from Ramses II's
reign. In fact, Seth is completely absent from the titular of Ramses II and its worship
appears only after the Battle of Kadesh and from the construction of the temple of Abu
Simbel started in year 5 of his reign (in 1279 BCE).
13th Dynasty
Sobkhotep IV Khaneferre
17th Dynasty
Length
No.
1
2
3
4
5
6
No.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
Reign
15th Dynasty
[Šamqenu?]
[‘Aper-‘Anati?]
[Sakir-Har?]
[Khyan?]
Apopi
Khamudi
?
Djehuty
Neferhotep III
Mentuhotepi
Nebiriau I
Nebiriau II
Bebiankh
Dedumose I
Dedumose II
Mentuemsaf
Mentuhotep VI
Senwosret IV
[Suserunere]
Aauserre
Hotepibre
16th Dynasty
Sekhemresementawy
Sekhemresankhtawy
Sankhenre
Sewadjenre
Semenre
Sewoserenre
Sekhemreshedwaset
Djedhotepre
Djedneferre
Djedankhere
Meryankhere
Snefruibre
[12 years]
[12 years]
[12 years]
[12 years]
20? years
4[1 years?]
[1? year]
1680
-
1632-1613
1613-1572
1572-1572
[ 1 year]
3 years
1 year
1 year
16? years
[ 3m.]
[ 1 year]
12 years
[ 3m.]
[ 3 years]
[ 1 year]
[ 1 year]
[ 1 year]
[ 1 year]
1572-1571
1571-1568
1568-1567
1567-1566
1566-1550
1550-1550
1550-1549
1549-1537
1537-1537
1537-1534
1534-1533
1533-1532
1532-1531
1531-1530
18th Dynasty
The chronology of the 16th dynasty (1572-1530) is conjectural175 because some kings
of this dynasty could have belonged to the end of the 13th dynasty176. The capital of the 16th
Dynasty had to be Edfu (or El-Kab?) while that of the 13th dynasty was Thebes177. The only
dated synchronisms with the Hyksos dynasties are those from the Israelite chronology:
13th Dynasty
1778
-
Israelite ruler
14th Dynasty
(1753-1741) Asiatics
Joseph co-regent
Cattle princes
Death of Joseph
(1690-1682)
15th Dynasty
Foolish princes of Tanis
Princes of her tribes
(1613-1573) Apopi
Moses Pharaoh
17th Dynasty 16th Dynasty
Moses alien resident in Madian
(1533-1530) Apopi (2)
then come back into Egypt
18th Dynasty
1530
Exodus
Reference
Gn 41:40-45
Gn 47:6
Gn 47:28
Is 19:11-13
Length
(80)
14
66
(105)
65
Reign
1758-1744
1744
-1678
1678
-1613
1613-1573
Ex 11:3
40
Ac 7:21-42
40
1573
-1533
Ex 16:35
40
1533-1493
A. DODSON, D. HYLTON – The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt
London 2010 Ed. Thames & Hudson Ltd, pp. 16-117.
176 M. DESSOUDEIX – Chronique de l'Égypte ancienne
Paris 2008 Éd. Actes Sud pp. 169-177, 226-235.
177 and regnal years on steles (like Sobekhotep VIII) are typical of Egyptian dynasties but they are absent among Hyksos dynasties.
175
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
40
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
CHRONOLOGY OF THE 18TH, 19TH, 20TH AND 21ST DYNASTIES
If the dates obtained by 14C (calibrated by dendrochronology) are imprecise they
nevertheless set values to +/- 15 years (2010) over the period 1500-1000178. Dates obtained
both by 14C and astronomy (dates in bold) have been highlighted (for reigns according to
astronomical dating see Basic astronomy for historians to get a chronology):
Reign
Length of reign
according to 14C
8
9
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
1
2
3
4
17th Dynasty
Taa Seqenenre
Kamose
18th Dynasty
Ahmose
Amenhotep I
Thutmose I
Thutmose II
[-Hatshepsut]
Thutmose III
/[Amenhotep II]
Amenhotep II
Thutmose IV
Amenhotep III
/[Amenhotep IV]
Akhenaton
Semenkhkare
-Ankhkheperure
Tutankhamon
Aÿ
Horemheb I [former regent]
Horemheb II [pharaoh]
19th Dynasty
Ramses I
Seti I
Ramses II
Merenptah
Seti II
[Amenmes]
Siptah
Siptah-Tausert / [Setnakht]
20th Dynasty
Sethnakht
Ramses III
Ramses IV
Ramses V
Ramses VI
Ramses VII
Ramses VIII
Ramses IX
Ramses X
Ramses XI
21th Dynasty
Smendes
Amenemnesut
Psusennes I
Amenemope
Reign according to
astronomical dating
gap
-
11 years
2 years 11 months
/1544-04/1533
05/1533-04/1530
1557-1532
1532-1511
1511-1499
1499-1486
14801486-1434
25 years 4 months
20 years 7 months
12 years 9 months
3 years
[21 years 9 months]
53 years 11 months
[2 years 4 months]
25 years 10 months
9 years 8 months
37 years 10 months
[11 years 5 months]
5 years 2 months
1 year 4 months
2 years 1 months
9 years 8 months
4 years 1 month
14 years
13 years 2 months
04/1530-07/1505
08/1505-02/1484
02/1484-11/1472
08/1472-07/1469
[08/1472-04/1450]
[08/1472-03/1418]
[11/1420-03/1418]
04/1418-02/1392
02/1392-10/1383
10/1383-07/1345
[03/1356-07/1345]
08/1345-10/1340
10/1340-02/1338
02/1338-03/1336
03/1336-10/1327
10/1327-11/1323
11/1323-11/1309
12/1309-01/1295
+27
+27
+27
+27
+8
+14
1302-1302
1302-1285
1285-1219
1219-1206
120612091200-1194
1194-1192
1 year 4 months
11 years
67 years 2 months
9 years 3 months
5 years
[4 years]
6 years
1 year 6 months
01/1295-05/1294
06/1294-06/1283
06/1283-07/1216
08/1216-10/1207
11/1207-10/1202
[04/1206-03/1202]
11/1202-10/1196
11/1196-04/1194
+7
+8
+2
+3
-1
+3
-2
-2
1192-1189
1189-1158
1158-1152
1152-1148
1148-1140
1140-1133
1133-1130
1130-1112
1112-1103
1103-1073
3 years 5 months
31 years 1 months
6 years 8 months
3 years 2 months
7 years
7 years 1 month
3 months ?
18 years 4 months
2 years 5 months
26 years 1 month ?
11/1196-03/1192
04/1192-04/1161
05/1161-12/1155
01/1154-02/1151
03/1151-02/1144
03/1144-03/1137
04/1137-06/1137
07/1137-10/1119
11/1119-03/1116
04/1116-04/1090
-4
-3
-3
-2
-3
-4
-4
-7
-7
-13
1073-1046
1046-1042
1042-997
997-989
26 years
4 years
46 years
9 years
1090-1064
[1064-1060]
1064-1018
1018-1009
-17
-18
-24
-21
1434-1407
1407-1397
1397-1359
1359-1345
1345-1342
1342-1333
1333-1330
1330-1302
+16
+15
+14
+5
+6
+6
+7
C.B. RAMSEY, M.W. DEE, J.M. ROWLAND, T.F. G. HIGHAM, S.A. HARRIS, F. BROCK, A. QUILES, E.M. WILD, E.S. MARCUS, A.J.
SHORTLAND - Radiocarbon - Based Chronology for Dynastic Egypt in: Science Vol 328 (10 june 2010) pp. 1554-1557.
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/data/328/5985/1554/DC1/1
178
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
DATING THE EXODUS ACCORDING TO THE ISRAELITE CHRONOLOGY
Every people of the past used their own calendar to count years, months and days.
Israelites were not an exception, and they were concerned about accurately placing events
on the time scale, as can be proved by long genealogical lists and frequent recordings of
how many years kings or judges ruled. Jews even considered that their book, the Bible, was
laying down history and there was no need to write any other specific book. The only
exception was the Seder Olam written around 160 C.E. This book mainly was an attempt to
reconstruct biblical chronology, and it tried to solve a problem occurring each time one
works on chronology: When did one particular period of time begin and when did it end?
A scientific chronology must fill two basic standards: it must be consistent with itself and
also with all key historical date (i.e. dates based on accurately dated astronomical
phenomena). Such standards exclude the inconsistent Septuagint based chronology on the
period 1000-500 BCE179 and the Seder Olam chronology which dates reigns of Persian
kings with a shift of 170 years (Cyrus would have begun ruling in 369 BCE and would have
died in 367 BCE)180. Current calculations of historical data are based on Thiele's biblical
chronology which is about 45 years off near 900 BCE181.
As attested by Qumran texts, the Bible Masoretic text was very well preserved. This
text is the one used to establish the scientific biblical chronology. Though it does not
mention any astronomical phenomenon, it does mention reigns of several Egyptian,
Babylonian and Persian rulers, as well as famous battles or the fall of well-known cities.
This allows indirect comparisons with key dates. Moreover, the biblical text often contains
a two-fold chronology: one by adding years of rules, and the other one by linking "anchor
periods". These periods appear as spans (often hundreds of years) telling how much time
elapsed between two major events. For example, Israelites were to be oppressed during 400
years (Gn 15:13). According to the biblical text, this period began with the persecution of
Abraham's son Isaac (Gn 21:8-9) and ended with the escape from Egypt and the end of
slavery (Ga 4:29).
Several important questions must be settled before any chronological calculation
may be done: How long is a year, a month or a day? When does the year, the month or the
day begin? Is the number of years inclusive or exclusive? For example, "the second year" of
a rule may count for one year (if the second year is beginning) or for two years (if the
second year is ending). At the very beginning of the Bible, time is already counted: Let
luminaries come to be in the expanse of the heavens to make a division between the day and the night; and
they must serve as signs and for seasons and for days and years (Gn 1:14). Since the sun and the
moon are mentioned, the year should be solar (365.24 days) and the months should be
lunar (29.53 days). Only the beginning of the day is indicated: it began when the previous
one ended (Gn 1:5). The beginning of the year is not stated, but it should be synchronized
with agricultural activity, which ended after harvests, before the cold winter (Gn 8:22). Old
Mesopotamian calendars all started at the autumn equinox; the first month, the one of the
renewal, was called Tishri, which means "beginning". The biblical text says that from
Exodus onward (approximately 1500 BCE) years no longer had to begin in Tishri but in
Nisan (Ex 12:2), at the spring equinox. Josephus (Jewish Antiquities I:81) confirms that the
Jews used to count from Nisan for religious or solemn (royal) activities, but continued
counting from Tishri for commercial activities.
J. HUGHES – Secrets of the Times. Myth and History in Biblical Chronology
in: Journal for the Study of the Old Testament Supplement Series 66 (1990) pp. 57, 267-272.
F. NOLEN JONES – The Chronology of the Old Testament
Texas 2005 Ed. Master Books pp. 170-173, 326.
180 H. GOLDWURM, N. SCHERMAN - Daniel: la Bible commentée
Paris 2001Éd. du Sceptre p. 334.
181 M.C. TETLEY – The Reconstructed Chronology of the Divided Kingdom
Winona 2005 Ed. Eisenbrauns pp. 178-186.
179
41
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
42
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
The first way to evaluate the accuracy of chronological data from the Bible is to
compare the consistency of results between the chronologies of the kings of Judah and
Israel. The biblical chronology according to the Masoretic text is as follows (King Hoshea
died at the fall of Samaria in 720 BCE, King Josias died at the battle of Haran in 609 BCE):
Event
Abraham in Ur
Israelites as foreigners
Exodus in Sinai
Israelites in Canaan
King of Judah
Solomon
Rehoboam
Abiyam
Asa
Jehoshaphat
Jehosaphat/Jehoram
Jehoram
[Athaliah] Jehoyada
Joash
Amasiah
Uzziah
[Azariah]
Jotham
Ahaz
Hezekiah
Manasseh
Amon
Josias
Jehoachaz
Jehoiaqim
Jehoiachin
Zedekiah
Jehoiachin (exile)
Period
#
2038-1963 75 From birth to departure into Canaan
1963-1533 430 From Canaan stay to Egypt deliverance
1533-1493 40 From Egypt deliverance to entering Canaan
1493-1013 480 From entering Canaan to year 4 of Solomon
Reign
King of Israel
Reign
1017 - 977 40
977-960
17 Jeroboam I
10/977
- 22
-05/955
960-957
3
957 41 Nadab
06/955-05/954 2
Baasha
06/954-04/931 24
Elah
05/931-04/930 2
Zimri
05/930
7 d.
Omri/
06/930-05/919/ 12
-916
[Tibni]
[06/930-01/925] 6
916 25 Ahab
06/919-01/898 22
-891
Ahaziah
02/898-01/897 2
[893-891] [2] Jehoram son Ahab 02/897-09/886 12
893 8 [Ahaziah]/ Joram
[07/887-09/886] 1
-885
Ahaziah
10/886-09/885 1
885-879
6 Jehu
10/885-03/856 28
879 40 Jehoahaz
04/856-09/839 17
-839
Jehoahaz/ Jehoash [01/841-09/839] 2
839 29 Jehoash
09/839-01/823 16
-810
Jeroboam II
01/823-05/782 41
810 52 [Zechariah]
06/782-02/771 [11]
[796 Zechariah
03/771-08/771 6 m.
Shallum
09/771
1 m.
Menahem
10/771-03/760 10
-758
Peqayah
04/760-03/758 2
758-742
16 Peqah
04/758-05/738 20
742-726
16 [Hoshea]
06/738-01/729 9
726-697
29 Hoshea
02/729-09/720 9
697-642
55
642-640
2
640-609
31
-609
3 m.
609-598
11
-598
3 m.
598-587
11
587-561
26
Reference
Gn 12:4-5
Ex 12:40-41
Ex 16:35
1Ki 6:1
1Ki 11:42
1Ki 14:20,21
1Ki 15:10,25
1Ki 15:28,33
1Ki 16:8
1Ki 16:10-16
1Ki 16:21-23
1Ki 16:29
1Ki 22:51
2Ki 3:1
2Ki 9:29
2Ki 9:24,27
2Ki 10:36
2Ki 10:35; 13:1
2Ki 13:10
2Ki 13:10
2Ki 14:23
2Ki 14:29
2Ki 15:8
2Ki 15:13
2Ki 15:17
2Ki 15:23
2Ki 15:27
2Ki 15:27-30
2Ki 17:1,3
2Ki 21:1
2Ki 21:19
2Ki 22:1
2Ch 36:2
2Ch 36:5
2Ch 36:9
2Ch 36:11
2Ki 25:27-28
The second way to evaluate the accuracy of chronological data from the Bible is to
cross-check results. The Septuagint (LXX) was completed circa 160 BCE, the Masoretic
Text (MT) c. 90 CE, the work of Flavius Josephus182 (FJ) c. 95 CE, that of Theophilus of
Antioch183 (TA) c. 180 CE and the Jewish chronology of the Seder Olam184 (SO) is fixed c.
200 CE. Errors (highlighted with *) and corrections (highlighted):
E. NODET - Le Pentateuque de Josèphe
Paris 1996 Éd. Cerf pp. 72-83.
183 THEOPHILE D'ANTIOCHE – Trois livres à Autolycus
in: Sources chrétiennes 20 (1948 Cerf) pp. 49-53, 154-159.
184 H.W. GUGGENHEIMER – Seder Olam. The Rabbinic View of Biblical Chronology
Lanham 2005 Ed. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers Inc.
182
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
Text of: TM
LXX
FJ
TA
SO
Abraham (Ur=>Harran)
75
75
75
75
75
journey Canaan-Egypt
430
430
430
430
430
Moses (Exodus)
40
40
40
40
40
Joshua
110 - 80 110 - 80 110 - 80
27
28
Without judge
[11]
[11]
18
0
Total de 40 +/-1 =
41
41
48
27
28
Cushan-rishataim
8
8
8
8
0
Othniel
40
40/50*
40
40
40
Eglon
18
18
18
18
18
Ehud
80
80
[80]
8*
80
Madian
7
7
7
7
7
Gideon
40
40
40
40
40
Abimelek
3
3
3
3
3
Tola
23
23
[23]
23
23
Jair
22
22
22
22
22
Anarchia
18
18
18
18
18
Total of 300 =
300
300
#
#
#
Jephte
6
6/60*
6
6
6
Ibzan
7
7
7
7
7
Elon
10
10
10
10
10
Abdon
8
[8]
[8]
8
8
[Eli] Philistines
40
20/40
40
40
40
Samson
20
20
20
20
20
Samuel's sons
[5]
[5]
12*
12*
10
Saul
[40]
[40]
20/40
20
3*
David
40
40
40
40
40
Solomon (year 4)
4
4
4
4
4
Total of 480 =
480
440
474*
#
#
Salomon
40
40
80
40
40
Rehoboam
17
17
17
17
17
Abiyam
3
6
3
7*
3
Asa
41
41
41
41
41
Jehosaphat
25 - 2
25 - 2
25 - 2
25 - 2 25 - 2
Jehoram
8
10
8
8
8
[Athaliah]
7-1
7-1
7-1
6
7+1
Joash
40
40
40
40
40
Amasiah
29
29
29
39*
22*
Uzziah (Azariah)
52
52
52
52
52
Jotham
16
16
16
16
16
Ahaz
16
16
16
17*
16
Hezekiah
29
29
29
29
29
Manasseh
55
55
55
55
55
Amon
2
2
2
2
2
Josias
31
31
31
31
31
Jehoiaqim
11
11
11
11
11
Zedekiah
11
11
11
11
11
Total of 390 =
390
190
390
405*
385
Babylonian empire
70
70
70
70
70
period
2038-1963
1963-1533
1533-1493
1493-1463
1463-1452
1493-1452
1452-1444
1444-1404
1404-1386
1386-1306
1306-1299
1299-1259
1259-1256
1256-1233
1233-1211
1211-1193
1493-1193
1193-1187
1187-1180
1180-1170
1170-1162
1162-1122
1122-1102
1102-1097
1097-1057
1057-1017
1017-1013
1493-1013
1017 - 977
977-960
960-957
957-916
916-893
893-885
885-879
879-839
839-810
810-758
758-742
742-726
726-697
697-642
642-640
640-609
609-598
598-587
977-587
609-539
43
reference
Gn 12:4-5
Ex 12:40-41
Ex 16:35
Jos 14:10;24:29
Jos 24:31
Nb 32:13
Jg 3:8
Jg 3:11
Jg 3:14
Jg 3:30
Jg 6:1
Jg 8:28
Jg 9:22
Jg 10:2
Jg 10:3
Jg 10:8
Jg 11:26,30
Jg 12:7
Jg 12:9
Jg 12:11
Jg 12:14
1Sa 4:18
Jg 16:31
1Sa 8:1-3
Acts 13:21
1Ki 2:11
1Ki 6:1
1Ki 6:1
1Ki 11:42
1Ki 14:21
1Ki 15:2
1Ki 15:10
1Ki 22:42
2Ki 8:17
2Ki 11:4
2Ki 12:1-2
2Ki 14:2
2Ki 15:2
2Ki 15:33
2Ki 16:2
2Ki 18:2
2Ki 21:1
2Ki 21:19
2Ki 22:1
2Ki 23:36
2Ki 24:18
Ezk 4:5-6
Jr 25:11-12
The biblical chronology according to the Masoretic text over the period 2038-539
BCE is therefore accurate, as a result the chronology reconstituted in this paper will use
Masoretic data. By convenience, the total period 2000-1 BCE has been divided into four
periods: the patriarchal period 2000-1500 BCE, the period of the judges 1500-1000 BCE,
the period of the kings 1000-500 BCE and finally the period of the second temple 500-1
BCE. Each period arises in the following way (example of the patriarchal period):
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
44
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
THE PERIOD OF KINGS (1097-517 BCE)
1057
977 960 957 916 893 885 879 839 810 758 742 726 697 642 640 627 609 598 588 587 539 538
a
b
c
d e
f g h i
40 40 17 3 41 23 8 6 40 29 52 16 16 29 55 2 13 18 11 10 1
40
390
70
18x50
50
517
j
70
a) End of Solomon's 40-year reign (1Ki 11:42). The splitting of his kingdom in two parts
(Israel and Judah) marks the start of a 390-year period that ends with the destruction of
Jerusalem (see §c). His successors would be Rehoboam: 17 years of reign (1Ki 14:21),
Abijam: 3 years of reign (1Ki 15:1-2) and Asa: 41 years of reign (1Ki 15:9-10).
b) Jehoshaphat ruled for 25 years (1Ki 22:41-42), but we must remove the 2-year coregency with his son Jehoram who became king in Jehoshaphat's 23rd year of reign, and
not after the 25th year. This can be checked: Jehoram, king of Judah, who ruled for 8
years, became king in the 5th year of Jehoram, king of Israel (2Ki 8:16-17), whose rule
had begun in the 18th year of Jehoshaphat (2Ki 3:1); 18 + 5 do amount to 23. After the
death of Jehoram, king of Judah, Athaliah ruled for 6 years (2Ki 11:3), then Jehoash for
40 years (2Ki 12:1), Jehoahaz for 17 years (2Ki 13:1), Amasiah for 29 years (2Ki 14:2),
Uzziah for 52 years (2Ch 26:3), Jotham for 16 years (2Ki 15:32-33), Ahaz for 16 years
(2Ki 16:2), Hezekiah for 29 years (2Ki 18:1-2), Manasseh for 55 years (2Ki 21:1), Amon
for 2 years (2Ki 21:19), and Josiah for 31 (= 13 + 18) years (2Ki 22:1).
c) The fall of Samaria began in year 4 of Hezekiah (2Ki 18:9-10) and ended in his year 6
corresponding to year 2 of Sargon II (in 720 BCE).
d) In Josiah's 13th year (Jr 25:3,11), Jeremiah began proclaiming the destruction of
Jerusalem. This 40 years period, foretold in Ezekiel (Ezk 4:6), ended with the
disappearance of the kingdom of Israel, that had been born 390 years before.
e) Start of Babylonian's 70-year rule over all the nations. This rule started at the beginning
of Jehoiakim's reign (Jr 27:1-7), after the battle of Haran during which king Josiah was
killed (2Ki 23:29), 4 years before the battle of Carkemish (Jr 46:2), and it terminated
with the destruction of Babylon. After Josiah's death, Jehoahaz ruled 3 months (2Ki
23:31). Jehoiakim, put on the throne by pharaoh Necho, reigned for 11 years (2Ki
23:34,36), and afterwards Zedekiah, enthroned by Nebuchadnezzar reigned for 11 years
(2Ki 24:17-18) until the destruction of the temple.
f) In Zedekiah's 10th year (Jr 32:1), because the people deliberately broke a Jubilee (Jr 34:811), the temple was destroyed and they were deported to Babylon. The liberation that
should have occurred at this Jubilee was postponed to the next one (Jr 34:13-22).
g) Destruction of the temple on the 10th day of the 5th month of Nebuchadnezzar's 18th
year according to Babylonian computation (Jr 52:12-13, 29).
h) Destruction of Babylon in 539 BCE after 70 years of slavery (Jr 25:11-12).
i) 1st year of Cyrus, the liberation from Babylon occurred.
j) End of the 70-year desolation period and of the exile (from Babylonia, but also from
Assyria and Egypt); beginning of a new 50-year Jubilee cycle185.
The year of Nebuchadnezzar's rule during which the temple was destroyed and the
70-year186 period began is controversial. To set the beginning of Nebuchadnezzar's rule, it
seems that the writer of Jeremiah's book, who lived under Egyptian and then Babylonian
J.-F. LEFEBVRE - Le jubilé biblique
Göttingen 2003 Éd. Universitaires Fribourg pp. 369-370.
186 When the seventy years granted to Babylon are over (Jr 29:10, Jerusalem Bible, London 1974).
185
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
45
authority, used both a computation including the accession year (Egyptian system) and a
computation not including the accession year (Babylonian system). This could explain
several 1-year gaps. However, those dates can be fixed through a chronological
reconstitution combining information given by other biblical writers and indications from
Babylonian tablets (the start of the exile can be set between the 7th and the 23rd year of
Nebuchadnezzar). Therefore, although Jeremiah's disconcerting dating sets the destruction
of the temple in Zedekiah's 11th year, i.e. either in Nebuchadnezzar's 19th year (Egyptian
computation) or in his 18th year, according to Babylonian computation (Jr 52:12,29), it is of
no consequence since this 18th year of Nebuchadnezzar is linked to Zedekiah's 10th year (Jr
32:1). The 70-year period is abundantly described, and it first relates to Babylonian rule
over all nations. According to the text of Jeremiah 25:1, 9-12, 17-26, Judea would be
devastated, and all contemporary nations would serve the king of Babylon for 70 years: The
word that occurred to Jeremiah concerning all the people of Judah in the 4th year of Jehoiakim the son of
Josiah, the king of Judah, that is, the 1st year of Nebuchadrezzar the king of Babylon (…). And all this
land must become a devastated place, an object of astonishment, and these nations will have to serve the king
of Babylon 70 years. And it must occur that when 70 years have been fulfilled I shall call to account
against the king of Babylon and against that nation, (...) even against the land of the Chaldeans, and I will
make it desolate wastes to time indefinite. Then the Chaldeans' country would become desolated.
It may be noted that this prediction was issued in the 1st year of Nebuchadnezzar.
Babylonian rule had already begun, but the devastation of Judah was still to come. The
period of slavery was to begin before the period of desolation. The 70-year period of
slavery applied to all the nations including Egypt, and not only to Judah. This period
started after the victory of Babylonian forces over the armies of Assyria and Egypt at
Haran, and then extended from 609 to 539 BCE.
A Babylonian chronicle (BM 21901) dates the final part of the battle of Haran to
the 17th year of Nabopolassar, in the month of Duzu187 (July) 609 BCE. During that year
Assyrian king Ashur-uballit II was killed (as well as Josiah); as Jehoahaz reigned 3 months,
Jehoiakim's rule must have begun around Tishri (October) 609 BCE. Since the fall of
Babylon happened in Tishri 539 BCE, Babylon dominated over the world for exactly 70
years. It can be noted that after king Josiah's death, pharaoh Necho II, who was a satrap of
Nebuchadnezzar (Against Apion I:133-137), brought the Judean kingdom under subjection
and changed the name of its king to Jehoiakim (2Ch 36:3-4). The 70 years period is
delimitated by two events apparently providential: the death of king Josiah (1Ki 13:2; 2Ch
35:20-24) and the accession of king Cyrus (Is 43:1, 45:1). Subjection to Egypt lasted for 8
years and was succeeded by subjection to Nebuchadnezzar after the battle of Carkemish.
Babylonian domination began in 609 and was exerted on Judah first through Egypt and
then directly, from king Jehoiakim's 8th year, 3 years before the end of his rule (2Ki 24:1).
The biblical text makes a difference between Babylon's legal rule [starting in 609 BCE] and
effective Babylonian rule [starting in 601 BCE].
Babylonian king
Nebuchadnezzar*
Nebuchadnezzar
Reign
611
-605
605
-
-562
King
Josiah
Jehoahaz
Jehoiakim
Jehoiachin
Zedekiah
[Gedaliah]°
Jehoiachin°°
J.B. PRITCHARD - Ancient Near Eastern Texts
Princeton 1969 Ed. Princeton University Press p. 305.
187
Reign
640-609
-609
609-598
-598
598-587
-587
(587-561)
Length
31 years
3 months
11 years
3 months
11 years
2 months ?
26 years ?
Reference
2Ch 34:1
2Ch 36:2
2Ch 36:5
2Ch 36:9
2Ch 36:11
2Ki 25:25
2Ki 25:27
Comment
*Coregent
°governor
°°in exile
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
46
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
According to Daniel 9:1,2,17-24: In the 1st year of Darius the son of Ahasuerus of the seed
of the Medes (...) I myself, Daniel, discerned by the books the number of the years concerning which the
word of Jehovah had occurred to Jeremiah the prophet, for fulfilling the devastations of Jerusalem, [namely,]
70 years (...) And now listen, O our God, to the prayer of your servant and to his entreaties, and cause
your face to shine upon your sanctuary that is desolated (...) Do open your eyes and see our desolated
conditions and the city that has been called by your name. Let us say first that Darius the Mede is
called Ugbaru in a Babylonian tablet188; he ruled over Babylon and appointed governors
(Dn 6:1) during the 5 last months of his reign and died at the end of his 1st year of reign, on
the 11 Arahsammu (November 538 BCE). So, one year after the destruction of Babylon,
Daniel explains that the 70 years would also be the length of the desolation (which was to
end in 517 BCE, since the temple was destroyed in 587 BCE). The words “desolated and
devastated land” are controversial, for they can mean either a "land deserted and without
inhabitants" (literal meaning) or a "land without worshippers" (religious meaning). The
biblical text favours the second meaning. Indeed, the start (as well as the end) of the literal
exile cannot be dated accurately, since it expands between Nebuchadnezzar's 7th and 23rd
year (Jr 52:28-30) and the exile was still going on at Esther's time (Est 2:6) around 470
BCE. However, the length of the religious exile (the period when there were "no
worshippers") is easier to settle, since it runs from the destruction of the temple to the
"liberation of the captives" on the 50th year of the Jubilee (religious meaning).
The words "causing desolation (Dn 9:27)" was understood by the Jews as the
disappearance of the sacrifices in the temple (and consequently of the worshippers) and not
as the disappearance of the inhabitants. When we read: by reason of my house that is waste, while
you are on the run, each one in behalf of his own house (Hg 1:1,9), text written in Darius' 2nd year,
that is on 520 BCE, we may understand also that the temple was waste of worshippers, not
of people. This religious meaning is used in Ezekiel 29:10-12: I will make the land of Egypt
devastated and dry, a desolate wasteland, from Migdol to Syene to the boundary of Ethiopia. Neither man
nor livestock will pass through it on foot, and it will not be inhabited for 40 years. I will make the land of
Egypt the most desolate of lands, and its cities will be the most desolate of cities for 40 years; and I will
scatter the Egyptians among the nations and disperse them among the lands. This could not be
understood in a literal way: a deporting of all Egyptian people in a foreign land would have
left some traces, but the religious meaning "without worshippers (Ezk 30:7,13)" is more
appropriate, since Jeremiah states that the sign (the 40-year period was beginning) would be
pharaoh Hophra's death (Jr 44:29,30; Ezk 30:20-22), exactly as Zedekiah's death marked
the end of worship in the temple. Pharaoh Hophra (whom Egyptian viewed as a living god)
was replaced in 570 BCE by Amasis, a mere general (and former putschist), who ruled
from 569 to 526 BCE. Pharaoh Hophra died a few years after the beginning of Amasis'
reign, probably in 566 BCE, his death being reported as occurring soon after Amasis' 3rd
year [567 BCE]189. Egypt then had no visible god (Pharaoh) between 566 and 526 BCE.
Herodotus wrote: It is said however that Amasis, even when he was in a private station, was a lover of
drinking and of jesting, and not at all seriously disposed (...) when finally he became king he did as follows:
—as many of the gods as had absolved him and pronounced him not to be a thief, to their temples he paid
no regard, nor gave anything for the further adornment of them, nor even visited them to offer sacrifice,
considering them to be worth nothing and to possess lying Oracles (The Histories II:174). From a
religious point of view, Egypt had been devastated, or without its god Pharaoh (a spiritual
desolation), during the 40 years of the ungodly dominion of Amasis (566-526). Similarly,
the land of Israel had been devastated for 70 years (587-517) when its holy priesthood was
no longer able to perform worship in the Temple (it was a spiritual desolation).
J.B. PRITCHARD - Ancient Near Eastern Texts
Princeton 1969 Ed. Princeton University Press p. 306.
189 G. DARESSY - Stèle de l'an III d'Amasis
in: Recueil de travaux relatifs à la philologie et à l'archéologie Paris 1900 pp. 1-9.
188
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
47
THE PERIOD OF THE JUDGES (1493-1097 BCE)
1533 1493 1488
a
b c
40
450
5 25 x
[41]
1452
d
1386 1366
e
1299
f
1211
g
1193
h
1122
i
j
1097
k
1013
l
8 40 18 20 20 40 7 40 3 23 22 18 6 7 10 8 40 20 y 40 40 4
80
[180]
300
480
18x50
a) Exodus from Egypt and start of 40-year wandering in the wilderness of Sinai before
entering Canaan (Ex 16:35).
b) Israel comes out of the Sinai and enters Canaan; beginning of a 300-year period which
would end with Jephthah's vow (Jg 11:26,30). Caleb enters Canaan when he is 80 years
old and the country is pacified when he is 85 years old (Jos 14:7,10).
c) Joshua, the same age as Caleb, died 110 years of age (Jos 13:1; 24:29; 2Sa 19:32). The
following period [x] is unknown, but it may be calculated. Indeed, the generation which
entered Canaan with Joshua was to take possession of the country (Jg 2:6-10), now as
the preceding generation had lasted 40 years (Nb 32:13), that makes it possible to
suppose that: [40] = 5 + [25] + x (25 = 110 - 85). In fact calculation gives x = 11 year,
because 300 = 5 + 25 + x + 8 + 40 + 18 + 20 + 20 + 40 + 7 + 40 + 3 + 23 + 22 + 18.
Joshua gives Israelites the pacificated Canaan country (Jos 11:23); start of the Jubilee
cycle to cancel the debts and free the captives every 50 years (Lv 25:8-11). The cycle
starts when Canaan is given to the Israelites, that is 5 years after they entered the
Promised Land (Dt 6:10,11; Jos 14:7,10).
d) Cushan-rishataim, a king from Mitanni (Šauštatar I) oppressed Israel for 8 years, then
Othniel judges for 40 years, then Eglon, a Moabite king, oppressed Israel for 18 years,
then Ehud judges the country (Jg 3:8-15).
e) Ehud starts a period of peace for 80 years (Jg 3:30) in the South (Judea), which ends by
40 years of full peace (Jg 5:31) preceded by 20 years of oppression in the North
(Samaria) by Jabin (Jg 4:3), a Canaanite king of Hazor. Ehud then Shamgar190 judge for
the 20 first years of full peace and Barak the last 40 years (Jg 3:26-31, 4:22-24).
f) The country of Midian oppressed Israel for 7 years, then Gideon judges for 40 years,
then Abimelech is king for 3 years, then Tola judges for 23 years and finally, Jair judges
for 22 years (Jg 6:1, 8:28, 9:22, 10:1-3).
g) Jair judges Israel for 22 years, but after his death no judge succeeds him and the land is
given over to oppression by Philistines, Ammonites, Egyptians, etc. This period of
trouble begins on 1211 and gets Israel in great distress for 18 years (Jg 10:3-13).
h) Jephthah as a judge over Israel for 6 years, Ibzan for 7 years, Elon for 10 years, Abdon
for 8 years. Then follows a 40-year period of oppression by the Philistines (Jg 12:7-13:1).
The period of 176 years from Jephthah to Solomon may be calculated by two ways,
first: 176 = 480 - 300 - 4, or 176 = 6 + 7 + 10 + 8 + 40 + 20 + 5 + 40 + 40.
i) Samson, who acts as a judge for 20 years, puts an end to oppression by the Philistines
(Jg 13:5; 16:31). The ark of the covenant is captured by the Philistines, then given back
to the Israelites 7 months later. It is moved to Kiriath-jearim where it will stay for 20
years191 (1Sa 6:1; 7:2).
j) Undetermined period (x) between the temporary end of idols use and Samuel defeating
The southern part of Israel was ruled in peace during 80 years (Jg 3:30), from 1386 to 1306 BCE. Shamgar judged less than 1 year
according to Josephus (Jewish Antiquities V:197). The name Shamgar (Ši-ma-qa-ri) appears in several Nuzi texts (ca 14th century BCE).
191 This 20-year period should correspond to the judicature of Samson which was characterized by peace (1Sa 7:13-15). During the reign
of Saul, the arch is located in Nob (1Sa 21:1, 22:19), a town near Qiriat-jearim north of Jerusalem (1Sa 14:16-18). After 40 years of Saul's
reign (1097-1057), David decided a few years after the beginning of his reign, to bring it back from Qiriat jearim to Jerusalem (1 Ch 13:5).
190
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
48
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
the Philistines. This period takes place before Saul's reign (1Sa 7:4,13; 9:15-16).
k) Saul rules for 40 years192 (Ac 13:21), then David for 40 years (2Sa 5:4).
l) Solomon rules for 40 years. A 480-year period that begins at the Exodus from Egypt
terminates in his 4th year of reign (1Ki 6:1; 11:42).
Three time spans in this period are controversial: the 5 years after the departure
from Egypt, the 480 years and the undetermined period (x). The 5-year period can be
calculated from the age of Caleb. According to the book o Joshua, Caleb was 85 when the
Israelites received the land of Canaan as their inheritance. This was what God had
promised to Moses 45 years before. The account specifies that Caleb was 40 when he
explored the country from Kadesh-Barnea (Jos 14:1,7,10). This exploration is dated to the
1st month of the 2nd year after the departure from Egypt (Nb 9:1, 13:25). Counting these
years however proves difficult, because Caleb was born in Egypt and was counting his
years according to the old calendar which began in Tishri, e.g. September/October. Then,
after having come out of Egypt, years were counted from Nisan (Ex 12:2, 23:15), e.g.
March/April, and no longer from Tishri. There was therefore a 6-month discrepancy with
the former system.
39 40 41
1 2
79 80 81 82 83 84 85
40 41 42 43 44 45
1 2 3 4 5 1 2
49 50
The 50-year Jubilee system did not begin in the first year after entering Canaan, but
only in Caleb's 85th year, because Israelites were given the land only after the pacification
period (Jos 1:15). It would have been impossible to cultivate the land and then to observe
Jubilee prescriptions during the conquest war. The conquest was quick, and Israelites (circa
1490 BCE) only burnt three cities: Jericho, Ai and Hazor (Jos 6:1,24, 8:19, 11:11-13).
Confirming exactly the biblical account, archaeology dates193 the destruction of these three
cities to the 15th century B.C.E. The first year of the 50-year Jubilee period started in Nisan
but was only celebrated on 10th Tishri of the same year (Lv 25:9-10).
The 480 years are controversial: And it came about in the 480th year after the sons of Israel
came out from the land of Egypt, in the 4th year, in the month of Ziv, that is, the 2nd month, after Solomon
became king over Israel (1Ki 6:1). We might conclude that the period began after Israel left the
country of Goshen, in Egypt. But this would contradict other biblical data. Indeed, if we
calculate the time starting before (and not after) the 40 years in the wilderness of Sinai, we
find: 40 + 300 + 6 + 7 +10 + 8 + 40 + 20 + 40 + 40 + 4 = 515 + x. If 515 + x = 480, x =
-35! Actually, the wilderness of Sinai belonged to Egypt since it was located in front of the
torrent valley of Egypt which marked its border (2Ki 24:7). Israelites therefore definitely
left Egypt when they crossed this torrent valley (after having spent 40 years in the
wilderness)194. Thus: 475 + x = 480, with x = 5 years. The translators of the Septuagint,
who knew about this 480-year period beginning at the Exodus from Egypt and ending after
(not before) the 40 years in the wilderness amended the figure to 440 years (= 480 – 40)195.
According to the Jerusalem Talmud (Megilla 72cd), the time of the conquest of Canaan
would have been 7 years, and the sanctuary at Shiloh 369 years, which gives: 480 = 7 + 369
+ 20 + 40 + 40 + 4 (in fact: 480 = 5 + 366 + 20 + 5 + 40 + 40 + 4)196.
The length of the reign, which had to appear in 1Samuel 13:1, can be deduced from the biography of Ishbosheth, a son of Saul, who
was born at the beginning of his father's reign (1Ch 8:33), because he was 40 years atSaul's death (2Sa 2:10). Josephus hesitated between
20 and 40 years (Jewish Antiquities VI:378, X:143), also in the sum of the reigns (Jewish Antiquities VIII:61, XX:230).
193 B.G. WOOD - Let the Evidence Speak
in: Biblical Archaeology Review March/ April 2007 pp. 26,78.
194 The Israelites who died in the wilderness (Nb 26:65) had desired to die in Egypt repeatedly (Ex 14:11; 16:3). This paradoxical wish has
been fulfilled.
195 From the output of Egypt (-1533) marking the beginning of Exodus to Solomon's 4th year (in -1013) there are 520 years (= 480 + 40).
196 The duration of the conquest of Canaan is 5 years and the duration of the sanctuary at Shiloh is 366 years (= 1488 – 1122), because it
is installed just after the conquest of Canaan (Jos 18:1), in -1488, disappeared at the death of the high priest Eli (1Sa 4:1-7:1) in -1122.
192
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
Occurrence of different spans between two seemingly identical events can be found
also about the ark when it was moved from Kiriath-jearim. The ark was brought to this city
where it stayed for 20 years. We also read that David decided to bring the ark back from
Kiriath-jearim to Jerusalem (1Ch 13:5) after Saul's 40-year reign. Where are those 40 years
to be found? It may be that meanwhile the ark was moved to Baale-judah, a city near
Kiriath-jearim (2Sa 6:2), or to Gibeah (1Sa 7:1) according to the Vulgate. The words "in the
Hill (Jos 24:33)" are strange indeed, because ba-guibeah generally is translated "in Gibeah
(1Sa 22:6)". The city of Gibeah was geographically near Kiriath-jearim. Moreover, Saul
requested the ark to be brought to him when he was in Gibeah (1Sa 14:16-18).
According to the biblical chronology, the anonymous pharaoh who confronted
Moses died in 1533 BCE. The departure from Egypt, which began in Ramses city, is dated
to 15/I (Nb 33:3). As the arrival in the Wilderness of Sin is dated 15/II (Ex 16:1) and the
final confrontation took place near Pihahiroth (Ex 14:9), midway between Rameses and the
Wilderness of Sin, pharaoh's death would have occurred on 1/II, which is dated on 9/10th
May 1533 BCE. A later biblical text (Ezk 32:2,7,8, Ps 136:15) mentions pharaoh's tragic
death and links it with a solar eclipse: Son of man, lift up a dirge concerning Pharaoh the king of
Egypt, and you must say to him: As a maned young lion of nations you have been silenced. And you have
been like the marine monster in the seas (...) And when you get extinguished I will cover [the] heavens (...)
All the luminaries of light in the heavens —I shall darken them on your account, and I will put darkness
upon your land. This text alludes to the Pharaoh of the Exodus, because the expression
“marine monster” always appoints this leader: For Egypt’s help is completely useless. So I have
called this one: Rahab, who sits still (...) Was it not you who broke Rahab to pieces, who pierced the sea
monster? Are you not the one who dried up the sea, the waters of the vast deep? The one who made the
depths of the sea a roadway for the repurchased ones to cross? (Is 30:7; 51:9-10). The expression “All
the luminaries of light in the heavens [sun and moon]” has a symbolic meaning but could
be understood by Jews only if it had also a literal meaning. Since pharaoh was considered a
god (the son of the sun-god Ra) by Egyptians, the eclipse (and also the moonless night)
would have impressed the people. The only total solar eclipse in this part of the world and
at this time197 occurred on 9th May 1533 BCE198. A total sun eclipse in a given area is very
rare. Between -1500 and -100, for example, there were only 11 total eclipses on the territory
of Israel during this period, that is to say on average every 120 years199. The date of 1/II
thus agrees perfectly with the eclipse date. The spring equinox fell on 3rd April 1533
BCE200; the following first crescent of the moon201 is dated to 10/11th April, and the first
crescent of the following month is dated to 9/10th May. Egyptian chronology, which is
based on Sothic rises, also dates to May 1533 BCE the violent death of pharaoh Seqenenre
after confronting Apopi, the Hyksos king who went off to Palestine. The other pivotal date
comes from the book of Acts where heavenly phenomena are mentioned in connection
with Jesus' death: The sun will be turned into darkness and the moon into blood (Ac 2:20). Usually,
the moon does look blood-red during a lunar eclipse (the more natural explanation for the
above passage202). The only lunar eclipse which was visible from Jerusalem on a Friday
between 30 and 33 CE was the one dated Friday 3rd April 33 CE.
Consequently, the biblical chronology is anchored on two significant events: Jesus'
death on 3 April 33 CE and the death of the Pharaoh who opposed Moses (beginning of
the Exodus), on 9 May 1533 BCE.
http://sunearth.gsfc.nasa.gov/eclipse/SEcat/SE-1599--1500.html
This eclipse of magnitude 1.08 (covering a strip of land 250 km wide) could be seen in Northern Egypt (at the level of Heracleopolis
city) around 4.40 p.m. and lasted more than 6 minutes.
199 F.R. STEPHENSON – Astronomical Verification and Dating of Old Testament
in: Palestine Exploration Quaterly 107 (1975) pp. 107-117.
200 http://www.imcce.fr/page.php?nav=fr/ephemerides/astronomie/saisons/index.php
201 http://portail.imcce.fr/fr/ephemerides/astronomie/Promenade/pages4/441.html
202 J.P. PARISOT, F. SUAGHER - Calendriers et chronologie
Paris 1996 Éd. Masson pp. 165, 166.
197
198
49
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
50
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
THE PATRIARCAL PERIOD (2038-1493 BCE)
2038
a
1963
b
1938 1933
c
d
1878 1788
e
f
5
75
25
100
100
150
60
1748 1678
g
h
400
40
215
90
110
105
430
450
1573
i
1533 1493 1488
j
k
l
40
5
40
a) Birth of Abraham (in 2038 BCE).
b) Abraham enters Canaan when he is 75 years old (Gn 12:4-5); 430-year alien residence
begins (Ex 12:40-41).
c) Birth of Isaac (in 1938 BCE), ancestor of the people of Israel, when Abraham is 100
years old (Gn 21:5); 450-year period begins (Ac 13:17-20).
d) Isaac is weaned at 5 years old203; 400 years of affliction204 begin (Gn 15:13). This period
starts when Isaac is persecuted by Agar's son205 (Gn 21:8-9) and ends with the Exodus
from Egypt and the end of slavery206 (Ga 4:25-29).
e) Birth of Jacob (in 1878 BCE) when Isaac is 60 years old (Gn 25:26).
f) Birth of Joseph in Jacob's 91st year since he is 130 years old (Gn 41:46-47, 53-54;
45:11; 47:9) when Joseph is 39 (= 30 years + 7 years of plenty + 2 years of famine).
g) Israelites (Jacob and his family, 75 individuals) come to Egypt in Joseph's 40th year (Gn
45:11; 46:5-7); beginning of a 215-year dwelling.
h) Joseph died in 1678 BCE, when he is 110 years old. Israelite chiefs appointed by
Joseph and later on by pharaohs as kings (Great Hyksos) administrate the land of
Goshen for 105 years (Gn 47:6; Ex 5:14).
i) Moses is banished for 40 years (1573-1533) in Madian before coming back to Egypt207
(Hb 11:24; Ac 7:21-23, 29-36).
j) Exodus from Egypt and beginning of 40-year (1533-1493) wandering in the wilderness
of Sinai before entering Canaan (Ex 16:35). Moses stands as the last “great personality
in Egypt”, because he was considered as “pharaoh's son” for 40 years (Ex 2:15; 11:3;
Dt 34:7), that is from 1613 to 1573 BCE.
k) Israel comes out of Sinai and enters Canaan (in 1493 BCE); beginning of a 5-year
pacification period (Jos 14:7,10) ending in 1488 BCE and fixes the beginning of
Jubilees (every 50 years). Moses dies at 120 years old (Dt 34:1-7).
l) Joshua completes pacification of Canaan (in 1488 BCE).
The 430-year period is controversial. We read: the dwelling of the sons of Israel, who had
dwelt in Egypt, was 430 years (Ex 12:40). Does that mean that Israel dwelt in Egypt for 430
years? This would contradict other biblical data. Jewish translators of the Septuagint were
aware of this ambiguity and thus chose to add an interpolation in order to prevent any
misunderstanding: The dwelling of the sons of Israel which they dwelt in the land of Egypt [and in the
land of Canaan] was 430 years long. This interpolation, that is also found in the Samaritan
Pentateuch, is in keeping with the context which says that the 430-year period covers the
total span of the painful dwelling of the sons of Israel outside the Mosaic covenant (Ga
3:17). This period does include two parts: the first one starts in Canaan with the Abrahamic
covenant rapidly followed by harassment of Isaac by Esau (Gn 21:9), and ends when Jacob
left for Egypt. The second one begins with the slavery in Egypt and terminates with the
According to 2Maccabees 7:27, breastfeeding usually lasted at least 3 years (see 2Ch 31:16).
The 400-year period begins with the oppression of Isaac and not from his birth.
205 The meaning of the Hebrew verb is "mocking" and not "play". The Talmud (Sotah 6:6) even mentions of abuse.
206 According to Maimonides (Epistle to Yemen III) and Rashi, the 400 years run from birth of Isaac to the departure from Egypt.
207 It is possible that Moses knowing the prophecy of Neferty stated under Amenemhat I (1975-1946), similar to the 400 years' prophecy
of Genesis 15:13, wanted to achieve it in 1575 BCE (= 1975 - 400), 40 years too early.
203
204
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
51
Exodus. The above verse should then be read as follows: the dwelling of the sons of Israel, who
had dwelt in Egypt [for 215 years], was 430 years long. Joshua's genealogy indirectly confirms this
215-year period (1Ch 7:23-28). Joshua was 40 years old when Israel fled Egypt (Jos 14:7) in
-1533. Then he would have been born about -1573. Assessing 20 years elapse between each
generation, we get the following dates of birth:
Jacob
Joseph
Ephraim
Beriah
Rephah
1
2
3
4
5
Father in
-1760
-1740
-1720
-1700
Resheph-Telah
Tahan
Ladan
Ammihud
6
7
8
9
Father in
-1680
-1660
-1640
-1620
Elishama
Nun
Joshua
(Exodus)
10
11
12
13
Father in
-1600
-1580
-1560
-1540
As Joseph was 17 years old when he came to Egypt (Gn 37:2), the period of time
from his marriage in 1758 (Gn 41:45-46) to the Exodus in 1533 amounts to 225 years (=
1758 – 1533), which are fully consistent with the 215 years that have just been calculated.
This chronological point was known in antiquity, since Josephus refers to it in his works
(Jewish Antiquities II:318). Demetrius (c. 220 BCE), already knew that the period in
Canaan lasted 215 years (Prepraratio evangelica IX:21:16). The biblical chronology
therefore sets rather precisely the date of the Exodus from Egypt in 1533.
Israelite ruler
(Reu)
period
(2509-2170)
(Serug)
(2377-2047)
(Nahor I)
(2247-2039)
(Terah)
(2168-1963)
# 3rd Dynasty
Djoser - Netjerikhet
Sekhemkhet
Nebka[ra]/ Sanakht
Khaba
Huni
4th Dynasty
Snefru
Kheops
Djedefre
Khephren
Baka
Mykerinos
Shepseskaf
Thamphthis
5th Dynasty
Userkaf
Sahure
Neferirkare (Kakaï)
Shepseskare
Neferefre
Niuserre (Ini)
Menkauhor
Djedkare (Isesi)
Unas
6th Dynasty
Teti
Userkare
Pepi I
Merenre I
Pepi II
Merenre II
Nitocris
7th-8th Dynasty
11th Dynasty
Mentuhotep I
Antef I
reign
2597-2578
2578-2572
2572-2553
2553-2547
2547-2523
synchronism
2523-2479
2479-2456
2456-2448
2448-2419
2419-2419
2419-2391
2391-2387
2387-2385
astronomy
astronomy
2385-2378
2378-2364
2364-2354
2354-2347
2347-2346
2346-2332
2332-2324
2324-2286
2286-2256
astronomy
astronomy
2256-2238
2238-2238
2238-2195
2195-2181
2181-2127
2127-2126
2126
2226-2118
astronomy
astronomy
Sargon of Akkad
9th-10th Dynasty
2118
-2102
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
52
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
Abraham
2038
-
175
1963-1957
1863
1878
-
Jacob
-1731
1788
-
Joseph
(vizier) 1758
147
110
-
-1744
Chiefs of cattle
(Job’s trial)
Moses (pharaoh)
-1678
1678
-
65
(1640)
-1613
1613
-1573
(in Madian) 1573
-
40
Antef II
Antef III
Mentuhotep II
Mentuhotep III
Mentuhotep IV
12th Dynasty
Amenemhat I
Senwosret I
Amenemhat II
Senwosret II
Senwosret III
Amenemhat III
Amenemhat IV
Neferusebek
13th Dynasty
Sobkhotep I
Sonbef
[-] Nerikare
Amenemhet V
Qemaw
Amenemhet VI
Nebnuni
Iufeni
Sihornedjherkef Hotepibre
[-] Sewadjkare
[-] Nedjemibre
Sobkhotep II
Reniseneb
Hor I
Amenemhet VII
Wegaf
Khendjer
Imyremeshaw
Antef V
Seth
Sobkhotep III
Neferhotep I
Sihathor
Sobkhotep IV Knaneferre
Sobkhotep V
Sobkhotep VI
Ibiaw
Aya
Ini I
Sewadjtu
Ined
Hori
Sobkhotep VII
Ini II
Neferhotep II
?
?
17th Dynasty
40 Rahotep
Sobekemsaf I
Sobekemsaf II
Antef VI
Antef VII
2102-2053
2053-2045
2045-1994
1994-1982
1982-1975
1975-1946
1946-1901
1901-1863
1863-1855
1855-1836
1836-1791
1791-1782
1782-1778
1778-1775
1775-1771
1771-1765
1765-1761
1761-1757
1757-1753
1753-1753
1753-1753
1753-1741
1741-1739
1739-1739
1739-1733
1733-1733
1733-1729
1729-1722
1722-1720
1720-1716
1716-1712
1712-1708
1708-1705
1705-1701
1701-1690
1690-1690
1690-1682
1682-1678
1678-1673
1676-1665
1665-1652
1652-1650
1650-1647
1647-1644
1644-1639
1639-1637
1637-1633
1633-1629
-1613
1613
-1573
1573-1569
1569-1567
1567-1557
1557-1555
1555-1545
Founding of Tanis
Execration texts
astronomy
Hyksos
14th Dynasty
[Yakbim]
[Ya‘ammu]
[Qareaḫ]
[‘Ammu]
[Sheshi]
[Nehesy]
?
Great Hyksos
15th Dynasty
Stele of year 400
[Šamqenu?]
[‘Aper-Anati?]
[Sakir-Har?]
Khyan?
Apopi Aauserre
Khamudi?
16th Dynasty
Djehuti
Mentuhotepi
Nebiriau I
Bebiankh
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
(Exodus)
-1533
1533
-
40
Joshua
1493
-1493
-
30
Without Judge
Cushan-Rishataim
Othniel
Eglon
Ehud /(Shamgar)
Jabin/ Sisera
Barak
-1463
1463-1452
1452-1444
1444-1404
1404-1386
1386-1366
1366-1346
1346
-
11
8
40
18
20
20
40
Madian
-1306
1306-1299
Gideon
1299
Abimelek
Tola
Jair
Anarchy
-1259
1259-1256
1256-1233
1233-1211
1211
-
Jephthah
Ibzan
Elon
Abdon
[Eli] Philistines
-1193
1193-1187
1187-1180
1180-1170
1170-1162
1162
-
Samson
Samuel's sons
Saul
-1122
1122-1102
1102-1097
1097
-
David
Solomon
-1057
1057-1017
1017
(-993)
Rehoboam
Abiyam
Asa
-977
977-960
960-957
957 -
-
Antef VIII
Senakhtenre
Seqenenre Taa
Kamose
18th Dynasty
Ahmose
Amenhotep I
Thutmose I
Thutmose II
[Hatshepsut]
Thutmose III
Amenhotep II
Thutmose IV
Amenhotep III
Akhenaton
Semenkhkare
-Ankhkheperure
Tutankhamon
Aÿ
7 Horemheb
19th Dynasty
40 Ramses I
Sety I
Ramses II
3
23
22
18 Merenptah
Sety II
[Amenmes]
Siptah
-Tausert
20th Dynasty
6 Sethnakht
7 Ramses III
10
8
40 Ramses IV
Ramses V
Ramses VI
Ramses VII
Ramses VIII
Ramses IX
20 Ramses X
5 Ramses XI
40 [Herihor]
21st Dynasty
Smendes
Amenemnesut
40 Psusennes I
40 Amenemope
Osorkon the Elder
Siamon
Psusennes II/III
22nd Dynasty
17 Shoshenq I
3 Osorkon I
41
1545-1545
1545-1544
1544-1533
1533-1530
1530-1505
1505-1484
1484-1472
1472-1469
[1469-1450]
1469-1418
1420-1392
1392-1383
1383-1345
1356
-1340
1340-1338
1338-1336
1336-1327
1327-1323
1323-1295
1295-1294
1294-1283
1283
(-1279)
-1216
1216-1207
1207-1202
[1206-1202]
1202-1196
1196-1194
53
Dedumose
Hyksos’ War
Shasu Land
Šauštatar I (Mitanni)
Tribe of Asher
War of Apirus
1st Israelite king
Stele of Israel
Sea Peoples
come in Philistia
1196-1192
1192
-1161
1161-1155
1154-1151
1151-1144
1144-1137
1137-1137
1137-1119
1119-1116
1116-1090
[1098-1085]
1090-1064
[1064-1060]
1064-1018
1018-1009
1009-1003
1003 - 984
994-980
980-959
959 -924
Shasu >> Aamu
1st king of Israel
Gezer attacked
Campaign in Palestine
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
54
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
-916
916 -891
Jehosaphat/Jehoram [893-891]
Jehoram
893-885
[Athaliah] Jehoyada
885-879
Joash
879 -839
Amasiah
839-810
Uzziah
810 [Azariah]
[796 Jehoshaphat
Jotham
Ahaz
Hezekiah
Manasseh
-758
758-742
742-726
726 -697
697 -
Jehoiaqim
Zedekiah
Jehoiachin (exile)
-642
642-640
640 -609
609-598
598-587
587 -
Zerubabbel
-561
538-525
Amon
Josias
Esther
Nehemiah
489-425
455-443
Ezra
Jesus
29-33
Shoshenq II
Shoshenq IIb
Takelot I
25
Osorkon II
[2]
8
6
40
Takelot II
29 Shoshenq III
52
Shoshenq IV
Pamiu
Shoshenq V
16
16 Osorkon IV (Sô)
29
Chabataka
55
Taharqa
26th Dynasty
Psammetichus I
2
31
Necho II
11
11 Psammetichus I
26 Apries
Apries/ Amasis
Amasis
Psammetichus III
27th Dynasty
Cambyses II
Darius I
Xerxes I
483 Artaxerxes I
Darius B
Artaxerxes I
Xerxes II
Darius II
28th Dynasty
Amyrtaeus
29th Dynasty
Nepherites I
Psammuthes
Hakor
Nepherites II
30th Dynasty
Nectanebo I
Teos
Nectanebo II
31st Dynasty
Artaxerxes III
Artaxerxes IV
Khababash
Darius III
924-922
-922
922
-909
909
-
-865
865-840
840 -800
800-788
788-782
782 -745
745 -712
712 -689
689-663
663
astronomy
23rd Dynasty
24th Dynasty
Alliance with Sô
25th Dynasty
-
-609
609 -594
594-588
588-570
569-567
569-526
526-525
526-522
522-486
496-475
475-434
434-425
425-424
424
424-405
Death of Josias
Governor
Queen
Governor
Elephantine
404-398
398-393
393
393-380
380
380-362
362-360
360-343
343-338
338-336
338-335
336-332
Messiah
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
CHRONOLOGY OF THE ‘HYKSOS' WAR’
The only major incident during the period before the “Hyksos' war” is recorded in
a decree of Antef VII208 (1555-1545), a predecessor of Seqenenre, the in absentia
impeachment of Teti, viceroy of Kush, who had fomented a rebellion209: Year 3, III Peret 25,
under the Majesty, King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Nebkheperre son of Ra, Antef [VII] (...) that one
ignores now his name in the temple (...) rebel and enemy of God, his writings have to be destroyed (...) any
king or powerful governor who will be merciful to him will not be able to receive the white crown [Upper
Egypt] anymore, he will not bear the Red Crown [Lower Egypt], he will not sit on the throne of Horus
[Egypt] of living beings, the two Mistresses will not be favourable to him. These remarks illustrate the
political situation at the time: kings of the 17th Dynasty had authority over Egypt but they
had delegated a part of Upper Egypt to vassal Kings of Kush and a part of Lower Egypt to
Kings of foreign Lands, the Theban kings of the 16th dynasty, such as Mentuhotepi (15671566) who wrote: one in whose governance people (can) live, one who functions as king [...] of victorious
Thebes! I am a king native of Thebes, this city of mine, mistress of the entire land, city of triumph210.
Relationships between Egyptian and Hyksos kings were peaceful, as evidenced by the fact
that stones of Senakhtenra's monument in Thebes come from Tura, near Memphis, which
proves that the Egyptian kingdoms (16th and 17th Dynasties) maintained trade and peaceful
relations, reversing a so-called rivalry211.
13th Dynasty (Lisht/Memphis)
15th Dynasty (Avaris)
?
?
1632
- [Khyan?]
1632-1613
?
?
Apopi
1613-1572
?
?
-1571 Khamudi?
1572-1571
King of Kush (Kerma)
17th Dynasty (Thebes)
16th Dynasty (Edfu)
?
Rahotep
1572-1568 Djehuty
1571-1568
?
Sobekemsaf I
1568-1566 Neferhotep III
1568-1567
?
Sobekemsaf II
1566-1556 Mentuhotepi
1567-1566
?
Antef VI
1556-1554 Nebiriau I
1566
Teti
1555
- Antef VII
1555
-1550
Nebiriau II
1550-1550
-(Semenre)
1550-1549
-1545 Bebiankh
1549
Antef VIII
1545-1545
Senakhtenre
1545-1544
Seqenenre
1544
-1537
-(Sekhemreshedwaset) 1537-1537
Dedumose I
1537-1534
(Hyksos’ war)
-1533 Dedumose II
1534-1533
Kamose
1533
- Mentuemsaf
1533-1532
Mentuhotep VI
1532-1531
-1531
-1530 Senwosret IV
1531-1530
18th Dynasty (Thebes)
Djehuti
1531-15?? Ahmose
1530-1505
Egyptian stories written before and after Apopi are contradictory212 since before
this king no tension can be reported, but the Hyksos suddenly become a calamity for
C. LALOUETTE – Thèbes ou la naissance d'un empire
Paris 1986 Éd. Fayard pp. 108-110.
209 C. VANDERSLEYEN - L'Egypte et la vallée du Nil Tome 2
Paris 1995 Éd. Presses Universitaires de France pp. 187-188.
210 D.B. REDFORD – Textual Sources for the Hyksos Period
in: The Hyksos: New Historical and Archaeological Perspectives. Philadelphia 1997 pp. 5,12.
211 S. BISTON-MOULIN – Le roi Sénakht-en-Rê Ahmès de la XVIIe dynastie
in: Égypte Nilotique et Méditerranéene 5 (2012) pp. 61-71.
212 P.A. CLAYTON - Chronique des Pharaons
Paris 2000 Éd. Casterman pp. 90-97.
208
55
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
56
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
Egyptians after their departure from Egypt. The earlier Egyptian documents show that,
contrary to the descriptions of later Egyptian sources, the Hyksos were builders, even
encouraging the spread of Egyptian literature and intellectual life of Egypt213. Furthermore,
paradoxically, no Pharaoh had this “war against the Hyksos” engraved on the rock, as was
the case for the Battle of Kadesh, which was nevertheless crucial in Egyptian history.
HYKSOS
Reign
14th Dynasty 1750 -1680
15th Dynasty 1680 -
Khyan
Apopi
-1613
1613 -1573
16th Dynasty 1572 -
Exodus
Canaan
HANA
Yahdun-Lim
(kings of Mari)
Zimri-Lim
Yâpaḫ-Šumu-Abu
Iṣi-Šumu-Abu
Yadiḫ-Abu I
[Muti-Huršana?]
Kaštiliaš
Šunuḫru-Ammu
Ammi-madar
-1533 Yadiḫ-Abu II
1533 - Zimri-Lim II
Kasap-ilî
-1493 Kuwari
1493 - Ya'usa / Hanaya
Qiš-Addu
Iddin-Kakka
HATTI
Ḫarpatiwa
Inar
Reign
1730-1710
1710
-1690
Waršama
1690-1670
Pitḫana
1670-1650
Anitta
1650-1630
Zûzu
1630
-1610
Ḫuzziya I ?
1605-1585
Tudḫaliya ?
1585
-1565
PU-Šarruma? 1565
Labarna
Ḫattušili I
Muršili I
Ḫantili I
Zidanta I
Ammuna
Ḫuzziya II
Telipinu
Alluwamna
Ḫantili II
Taḫurwaili I
Zidanza (II)
Ḫuzziya II
Muwatalli I
Tutḫaliya I
-1550
1550-1530
1530-1510
1510-1500
1500-1495
1495
1495-1485
1485
1485-1480
1480-1475
1475-1470
1470
1470-1465
1465-1460
1460-1455
1455-1435
KASSITE
Eḫli-Tešub
Niqmepa II
Ibirânu II
Ammurapi I
Niqmepa III
Ibirânu III
-1560
1560-1545
1545-1530
1530-1515
1515-1500
1500
- Kirta
Niqmepa IV
-1485
1485
- Šutarna I
Barattarna I
Niqmaddu I
BABYLON
Reign
Sîn-muballiṭ 1717-1697
Hammurabi 1697
-
1661
-1635
Agum I
1635-1613
Kaštiliaš I
1613-1591
Ušši
1591-1583
Abirattaš
1583-1567
1567-1551
Kaštiliaš II (?)
Urzigurumaš (?) 1551-1535
1535
Harbašihu (?)
-1519
Tiptakzi
1519-1503
Agum II
1503-1487
Burna-Buriaš I 1487-1471
Kaštiliaš III
1471-1455
Ulam-Buriaš
1455-1439
Reign MITANNI
1725-1710
1710-1695
1695-1680
1680-1665
1665-1650
1650-1635
1635-1620
1620-1605
1605-1590
1590-1575
1575
-
Ibirânu IV
Reign
Gandaš
UGARIT
Ugarânu
Amqunu
Rap’anu
Lîm-il-Malik
Ammu-harrâši
Ammu-šamar
Ammištamru I
Niqmepa I
Mabu’u/’il
Ibirânu I
Ya’dur-Addu/
N. GRIMAL - Histoire de l'Égypte ancienne
Paris 1988 Éd. Fayard p. 246
J. VERCOUTTER - Les Hyksos
in: Encyclopédia Universalis (1994) pp. 820-821.
213
Reign
1716-1700
1700-1680
1680-1667
1667-1654
1654-1641
1641-1627
1627-1613
1613-1591
1591-1575
1575
-1559
1559-1543
1543-1527
1527-1511
1511-1495
1495-1480
1480
-1455
1455-1435
Reign
-1654
1654-1645
1945-1927
1627-1616
Abi-ešuḫ
1616-1588
Ammiditana 1588
Samsu-iluna
-1551
Ammiṣaduqa 1551
-1530
Samsuditana 1530
-1499
ASSYRIA
Êrišu II
Šamšî-Adad I
Išme-Dagan I
Aššur-dugul
Bêlu-bâni
Libbaya
Šarma-Adad I
Puzur-Sîn
Bazaya
Lullaya
Šû-Ninûa
Šarma-Adad II
Êrišu III
Šamšî-Adad II
Išme-Dagan II
Šamšî-Adad III
Aššur-nêrârî I
Reign
1722-1712
1712-1680
1680-1670
1670-1664
1664-1654
1654-1638
1638-1626
1626-1615
1615-1588
1588-1582
1582-1568
1568-1565
1565-1553
1553-1547
1547-1531
1531-1516
1516
1500
-1491
Puzur-Aššur III 1491
-1485
1485
-1480
1480
-
-1470
1470
-1450
1450-1430 Šauštatar I
Enlil-nâṣir I
-1455 Nûr-ili
1455-1435 Aššur-rabi I
-1467
1467-1455
1455-1443
1443-1433
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
The reconstruction of this time period shows that it all happened during the reign
of Kamose. Two paradoxes appear: 1) Kamose who is nevertheless the key element in the
“Egypt liberation” is not placed at the beginning of the 18th dynasty, and in his lengthy
biography the soldier Ahmose son of Abana detailing his service, from Seqenenre until
Thutmose I, ignored Kamose, the major hero of the war; 2) Some Egyptologists describe,
by conjecture, a violent war with the Hyksos, but the remains of Avaris show no trace of
conflagration and destruction, but rather a gradual abandonment of the city214. The mystery
is over. What really happened and why have Egyptians always refused to identify the culprit
of their disaster, as Herodotus noted (The Histories II:128)?
The first document about the “war of the Hyksos” is an account between pharaoh
Apopi and pharaoh Seqenenre giving the reasons for the conflict (parts in square brackets
have been reconstituted according to the context)215:
It was the land of Egypt was in trouble because there was no lord, life-integrity-health, as king of
the (entire) region. It was then, king Seqenenre, life-integrity-health, was ruler of the Southern City (Thebes)
and was the misfortune of Asiatics in the city for the prince Apopi, life-integrity-health, was installed in
Avaris. He had put the entire country in his service, the North (Delta) also providing (him) all kinds of
good products from the Northern Land. Now king Apopi, life-integrity-health, made Sutekh (Baal) his
lord, he did not serve any god of the whole country except Sutekh. He built (him) a temple in perfect work
for eternity next to the palace King Apopi, life-integrity-health, he appeared [...] days to present [his
offering] to Sutekh daily while dignitaries [...] wore linen cloths used in accordance with the temple of ReHarakhti in front of it. Now therefore king Apopi, life-integrity-health, would send a letter of challenge (to)
king Seqenenre, [life-integrity-health,] Prince of the Southern City. After many days had elapsed after this,
king [Apopi, life-integrity-health] did call [...] write [...] and dignitaries [said: « O] sovereign, life-integrityhealth, our Lord [grant that Seqenenre chasing after] some hippos out the lake [that lie to the east of the
City, considering] that they don't leave [coming to us the sleep neither day nor] night [their din fills the ears
of our city ...] So the Prince of the Southern City [...] is with him (Seqenenre) as a protector, he bows to no
god [in entire country] except Amun-Ra-king-of-gods. After many days had elapsed after this, the king
Apopi, life-integrity-health, sent to the Prince of the Southern City the letter of challenge than he had called
his scribes scholars. The messenger of king Apopi, life-integrity-health, came to the Prince of the Southern
City. So he was taken in the presence of the Prince of the Southern City and one (the Prince) said to the
messenger of King Apopi, life-integrity-health: « Why have you sent to the Southern City? Why hast thou
done this trip? ». Then the messenger told him (to Seqenenre): « It is king Apopi, life-integrity-health, that
sends me to you to tell you: “do make chasing out of the lake hippos that are to the east of the city
considering they do not let me get to sleep either by day or night, their uproar fills the ears of the city” ». So
the Prince of the Southern City burst into tears, in great despair, for he was (not) in a state of knowing how
to respond to the messenger of King Apopi, life-integrity-health. So the Prince of the Southern City said: «
Is it that thy lord, life-integrity, health, hear the noise [of hippos] in the east of the Southern City over there
(in Avaris, 900 km north)? ». So [the messenger precised?] the terms (of the challenge) on which he
(Apopi) had written. [The prince of the Southern City made sure] that were taken care of [the messenger of
king Apopi, life-integrity-health, through all kinds] of good things, meats, cakes [ ... Then the Prince of the
Southern City] said: [« So I will do that. Go back where you came,] and all that thou shalt say to him (to
Apopi), I will. So will you tell him ». [... Then messenger of king] Apopi, life-integrity-health, was
transported on a journey to the place, where his lord, life-integrity-health. Then the Prince of the Southern
City convoked his great dignitaries, and all the soldiers and generals before him, and repeated all the terms
of challenge on which king Apopi, life-integrity-health, wrote to him. And then they all remained silent, in
great distress, without knowing answer for good or evil. Then King Apopi, life-integrity-health, wrote to [...]
(End of document lost).
M. BIETAK – Avaris
in: Dossiers d'Archéologie n°213 mai 1996 pp. 16-23.
215 C. BARBOTIN – Âhmosis et le début de la XVIIIe dynastie
Paris 2008 Éd. Pygmalion pp. 231-235.
214
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As one can see, there are many anomalies, to say nothing of strangeness: 1) How is
it that Seqenenre, the penultimate king of the 17th dynasty, discusses with Apopi, the last
king of the 15th dynasty, while we should have a Theban king from the end of the 16th
dynasty? Why is a pharaoh shocked that another Pharaoh worships only one god216? What
do the letters of challenge from pharaoh Apopi contain so serious that they could make
pharaoh Seqenenre burst into tears, in great despair?
The Challenge "the hippos from the Southern City [Thebes] make noise" (which is
absurd, Avaris is approximately 900 kilometres from Thebes) was actually a harbinger of
death against Pharaoh because, according to Egyptian mythology, Menes, the 1st king of
Egypt was killed by a hippopotamus. In addition, each year, pharaoh
put to death a hippopotamus an incarnation of Seth, in a ritual manner,
to commemorate the triumphant struggle of Horus against Seth. So
this sinister omen could explain the reaction of Seqenenre Taa who
bursts into tears, in despair, and why his great dignitaries all remain
silent. No Egyptian source has described the sequence of events, but
the state of the mummy of Seqenenre, especially his head indicating
serious injury (opposite picture), is eloquent, this pharaoh died (aged 30
to 40 years) in a very violent manner and it took quite a long time
before his mummification217. Although this event was exceptional the
Egyptians are absolutely silent about this death, but it is not the case of
Egyptologists who explain that Seqenenre was probably slaughtered by at least 2 Hyksos
soldiers. This explanation is ridiculous because this would mean the Egyptians left to
decompose the corpse of their pharaoh before its mummifying,
fying, what
what would
would have been
blasphemy. Moreover, as the ribs and vertebrae are fractured and
dislocated, Seqenenre had to be attacked by two Terminators!
Not only is the brutal death of Seqenenre inexplicable,
ble,
but his eldest son, the Crown Prince, also died shortly beforee in
dramatic circumstances: Seqenenre had an heir, Prince Iahmes. He !died
He
at six years old and his father followed closely (...) Very quickly his cult was
cult
formed [and would last until the beginning of the 21st dynasty] and hehewas
is
the first of the "big family" Royal from the late 17th and early 18th Dynasty
asty
to have been the object of worship, before Amenhotep I and Iahmes Nefertari
rtari
(...) inscriptions of the statue reveal that this prince was the eldest sonn of
Seqenenre Djehuty-Aa (...) The statue is exceptional in many respects. This
is a large statue of 1.035 m tall, which is remarkable at a time when there
were almost no statues! It shows family grief, the prince evidently died
prematurely as it is regretted by his mother and two sisters, and his fatherr the
king. It is unique in the history of Pharaonic Egypt that a king declaress his
paternity and speaks directly to his son, using a second person218. The
reasons for this cult that lasted nearly half a millennium remain
ain
mysterious. The examination of the mummy of Iahmes Sapaïr
païr
indicates that this prince measured 1.17 m219 which evaluatess to
as
6/7 years the age of his son. Despite his young age, Ahmose
ose
O. GOLDWASSER – King Apophis and the Emergence of Monotheism
in: Timelines Studies in Honour of Manfred Bietak Vol. I (2006) pp. 129-133, 331-354.
217 A.-P. LECA – Les momies
Paris 1976 Éd. Librairie Hachette pp. 147-148.
218 C. VANDERSLEYEN - Iahmès Sapaïr
Paris 2006 Éd. Safran pp.14-20,27.
219 The enthronement name: Sapaïr (s3 p3 ir) “son of the one who acted”, was attached shortly after the death of Seqenenre. Furthermore, the
mummy of the prince measuring 1.17 m and his statue with a size of 1.035 m, it had to be done about 1 year before his death.
216
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
Sapaïr was circumcised220 to indicate that he was pure in gods' eyes which was exceptional,
because circumcision was usually performed at puberty221.
On the stela of year 3 of Kamose222 appears the first detailed report of the "taking
of Avaris", an inaccurate term because there is no fighting, the city being only looted. This
inscription looks more like a report written shortly after the events rather than a declaration
of victory, traditionally laudatory. Important point of this inscription: Kamose's retaliation
was not caused by an attack of the Hyksos since his counsellors remind him223: we are at
peace with our Egypt. The entry is highlighted in the following points224:
A1/225
Year 3 of the Horus appearing on his throne, the Two Ladies of renewing the memorials, the golden
hawk which pacifies the Two Lands, King of Upper and Lower Egypt (nsw-bity) Wadjkheperre [son of
Ra Ka]mose, endowed with life, beloved of Amun-Re lord of the thrones of the Two Lands like Ra, forever
nights and days. A2/The victorious king (nsw) in the nome of Thebes, Kamose endowed with life for eternity
of nights, is a king (nsw) efficient: it is Ra himself [who made him] King (nsw), who sent him victory in
truth! His Majesty said in his palace in the board of his dignitaries A3/who were following him: « How do I
should recognize, my victory, with a prince (wr) in Avaris and another in Kush, I who have been enthroned
in company with an Asiatic (‘3m) and a Nubian (nḥsy)? Each has his part in this Egypt. The country
has been shared with me, and A4/there is no one who goes beyond (his share) up to Memphis, the canal of
Egypt: see then he holds Hermopolis! One can't stop without being squeezed by easements (taxes) of
Asiatics. I'll confront him, I'll disembowel him, I desire to get hold (whole) of Egypt and destroy A5/the
Asiatics! ». The dignitaries of is council said: « As far as Cusae is the allegiance of Asiatics. Flaps on their
chatter, for we are at peace with our Egypt! Elephantine is impregnable, A6/and the center (of the country)
belongs to us as far as Cusae. Plowing for us the best in their fields, our cattle graze in the marshes (Delta),
the grain is shipped (for fattening) our pigs, our cattle are not stolen, no crocodile A7/[...] because of this, he
(the Hyksos king) holds Asiatic country and we hold Egypt. If coming (the one that would work against)
and we would act against him ». They affected the heart of His Majesty « with regard to your will A8/[...]
right, I should not acknowledge the one that shares the country with me, those Asiatics who [...] A9/I sail
northward to complete the annihilation of Asiatics and success will result. If [... his eyes] in tears, the whole
country [...] A10/the ruler (ḥq3) in the nome of Thebes, Kamose who protects Egypt. So I sailed northward
through my courage to chase the Asiatics, and by order of Amon who attests to the will, my valiant army
A11/
before me like the heat of a flame. The Medjaÿs troupe which is east of our watch will flush out the
Asiatics and destroy their settlements, east and west providing them the grease A12/while the army eats food,
anywhere. I sent the victorious troop of Medjaÿs, I was so busy with [...] to the encirclement of the [rebel]
A13/
Teti, son of Pepi, within Nefrusy [near Hermopolis]. I will not allow him to escape when I should expel
the Asiatics who oppose Egypt in order for him to do Nefrousi a nest of Asiatics! It's on my ship, the heart
happy, I spent the night A14/. At dawn, I found myself on board, similar to the status of a hawk, and after
lunch, I devastated, having demolished its walls, killing its people and bringing down his wife (of the rebel
Teti) A15/to shore, my army like the state of lions, in charge of his booty, crumbling of slaves, cattle, fat and
honey, busy with the division of his property, his heart swelling (of joy). District Nefrusy A16/is in a state of
surrender, we will not totally lock up the (?), Per-shaq goes away when I approach him, his carriages have
fled inside. Patrols of the army [...], A17/those who remember in the valley, their goods, it [...]
G. ELLIOT SMITH – Catalogue Général Antiquités Égyptiennes du Musée du Caire: The Royal Mummies. Vol. 59
Le Caire 1912 Éd. Institut Français d'Archéologie Orientale pp. 1-6, 25.
221 This child would be born around 1540 BCE, which was an exceptional coincidence for the Egyptians because every 243 years the
heliacal risings of Sirius and Venus coincided. This exceptionnal event marked a new era called the Great year by Greek authors (and
described as the rebirth of the Phoenix), and it occurred exactly on 12 July 1543 BCE at Thebes and during a full moon (G.W. VAN
OOSTERHOUT – Sirius, Venus and the Egyptian Calendar in: Discussions in Egyptology 27, 1993, pp. 83-96). The Horus name of Seqenenre
was “the one (Sirius) appeared in Thebes”. The Crown Prince Ahmose (Iahmes) Sapaïr therefore symbolized the emergence of a new era
for the Egyptians (in fact, the 18th Dynasty will begin with Ahmose, the younger brother of Ahmose Sapaïr).
222 L. HABACHI – The Second Stela of Kamose and his Struggle against the Hyksos Ruler and his Capital
Glückstadt 1972 Ed. Verlag J.J. Augustin pp.31-67.
223 C. LALOUETTE – Thèbes ou la naissance d'un Empire
Paris 1986 Éd. Arthème Fayard pp. 117, 591 note 51.
224 M. DESSOUDEIX – Lettres égyptiennes. La naissance du Nouvel Empire de Kamosis à Thoutmosis II
Paris 2010 Éd. Actes Sud pp. 12-60.
225 A1 means “line 1 of the first stela of year 3 of Kamose” and B1 means “line 1 of the second stela of year 3 of Kamose”.
220
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[--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------]
B1/
terrible news in your city: you are turned back on the side of your army! You are insolent when you make
me a worthy (sr), while you're a ruler (ḥq3), until I'll ask B2/for you this illegitimate good because of which
you fall! Look at the disaster behind you! My army close behind you, women of Avaris will not give birth
anymore because it is no longer (a man) who opens their heart B3/in their belly when the clamour of my army
is heard. I am moored in front of the citadel, and the brave (of my army) said: « My heart is swollen (of
joy), I'll show B4/Apopi time of the weakness, he the prince (sr) of Retenu to weak arms, who devises in his
heart heroic acts without occurring in his favour ». I came to Inyt-B5/of-the-upstream (in Avaris), I crossed
the river toward them (my soldiers) to the harangue: « Steer me to ensure the fleet that (each ship) is
disposed one behind the other, I want to put them bow to stern, with the B6best of my brave going to fly over
the river, how would do a hawk, my ship gold-headed ahead. (It) is like their falcon-headed. B7I want to
place this warship in the limits of the desert, the fleet behind him as it (?) ravaging the land B8of Avaris. I
watched its women (of Avaris) at the top of his castle watching from their windows to port. There is no
(man) who opens their bellies when B9they see me, while watching through its loopholes in their walls, like
little mice to the bottom of their holes, saying: « How he goes fast ». B10Here I am to triumph, what is left
(of the country) is in my hand, my action is effective! By victorious Amon, I do not spare you, I will not let
you cross a field B11without finding myself in front of you! So your heart fails, moron Asiantic! Look, I
drink wine of your vineyard, B12the one that press for me the Asiatics I capture, I ransacked your place of
residence, I cut your trees after having put your wives in (my) slipway B13and I took possession of carriages. I
have not left a board from the 300 ships (made) of fresh pine which were full of gold, lapis lazuli, silver,
turquoise, B14bronze axes without number, excluding oil moringa, incense, honey, wood-ituren, woodsesenedjem, wood-sepen, all precious woods B15and all beautiful imports from Retenu. I have taken
everything, I have nothing left, Avaris is doomed to penury, the Asiatic perished. B16So your heart fails,
moron Asiatic who said: « I am the Lord (nb), unrivalled as far as Hermopolis, as far as Pi-Hathor on
the (?) and as far as Avaris B17between the two rivers ». I left it in the destruction, without inhabitants,
having sacked their cities. I burned that their settlements which were reduced to mounds redden (by fire),
B18
for the eternity of nights, because the damage they had done inside Egypt. Those who allowed themselves
to listen the call of Asiatics, they have abandoned Egypt, their mistress. B19I captured his messenger (of
Apopi) east of the oasis (in Bahariyah) as he went back south to Kush with a written message. I found
there the written retranscrition of the words from the ruler (ḥq3) of Avaris: B20« Aauserre, the son of Ra,
Apopi, send greetings to (my) son, Ruler (ḥq3) of Kush. Why did you set up as ruler (ḥq3) without letting
me know? B21Did you see what Egypt has done against me? The ruler (ḥq3) therein, Kamose endowed with
life, driving me out of my land as I have not attacked, in a manner identical to what he had done B22against
you. He wants to tear the two countries to destroy my country and yours, after having ransacked. Come,
come down the Nile, did not hesitate. B23Look, he's here with me, there is someone who opposes you in (this
part of) Egypt. Look, I do not let him free rein until you came here. So we will share B24those cities of (this
part of) Egypt and Khenthennefer will rejoice! ». Wadjkheperre (Kamose) endowed with life that drives
away evil. B25I placed the deserts and uphill of the country under my authority, and rivers as well, one can
not find a way to assault me. I can not be careless about my army (because one) had not yet prevailed B26on
the northern (Apopi). That's when I went to the north that he was afraid of me, before we fought, before
I've never met him. When he saw my flame, he wrote to Kush (a letter) B27requesting his protection. I
intercepted him (the messenger) in the desert, so I do not permit that he arrive. So I made him take in order
to send him back. It (the letter) was left B28toward Atfih. My triumph has penetrated his heart, his
members were dashed when his messenger told him what I had done against the District of Cynopolis which
was part B29of his possessions. I sent my powerful troop which goes by land to devastate the oasis of
Bahariyah. B30while I was at Saka to prevent a rebel behind me. So it is a brave heart and a happy heart
that I sailed southward, destroying any rebel who was on the road. What a perfect trip toward the south it
was for the ruler (ḥq3), B31life, integrity, health, with his army in front of him (Kamose)! There was no loss,
no one inquired for his friend, no one cried. This is at time of the season B32Akhet that I arrived with
hastily on the floor of the City (Thebes). Each face was bright, the country was in opulence, the port was in
jubilation, the Theban nome was celebrating. Women and men were constantly coming B33to see me. Every
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
woman pressed again and again, his fellow in his arms. No face was in tears. The incense was (placed) to
the brave inside the Nekhen chapel where one says: B34« Get what's good! » as when it gives strength to the
son of Amon, life, integrity, health, sustainable King (nsw) ‘Wadjkheperra’, son of Ra ‘Kamose the
victorious one’, given life, B35that defeated the South and who drove out the North, who seized the country by
force, given life, stability and power, his joy being with his ka, like Ra for ever and ever. B36His Majesty has
ordered the Director, Governor, Superior of the secrets of the royal domain, higher in-Chief of the entire
domain, Chancellor of the king of Lower Egypt (bity), instructor of the two lands in front, Governor,
Directors of Friends, B37Director of sealed things, Wesernesha: Make sure you write all that My Majesty
made thanks to the strength of a stele. Its place will be located in Karnak in B38the Theban nome forever
and ever. And he (Wesernesha) said to his Majesty: It is in relation to the favor of the royal presence I do
any mission. The director of the seal Neshi.
As one can see, there are several anomalies226: 1) At the beginning of the inscription
“year 3 (renpet 3)” is the number of years and not regnal years “year 3 (hat-sep 3)”; 2)
Pharaoh's name should have appeared at the beginning (as in Pharaoh Apopi's letter in line
B20) instead of the god Horus, who merely represents the pharaoh; 3) according to the
chronological description of Kamose's military campaign, Apopi had, at the beginning of
hostilities, a full title of pharaoh (line B20) with a power superior to the viceroy of Kush
since he called the latter "my son227" (kings of same power wrote to each other using the
expression "my brother") while Kamose is referred to as "worthy" by Apopi (line B1).
During the drafting of the stele by Wesernesha, who was Chancellor of the king of Lower
Egypt, Kamose was only the king of Upper Egypt (lines B34-38) and ruler of Thebes.
Kamose's titulary evolved rapidly: Worthy, Ruler of Thebes, King of Lower Egypt and
finally King of Upper and Lower Egypt. Apopi's titulary, on the contrary, decreased
rapidly: King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Ruler of Avaris and finally Prince of Retenu.
The stele provides essential information to rebuild the military campaigns of
Kamose in chronological order: 1) Kamose complained for being squeezed by easements
(taxes) of Asiatics. 2) He desired to get hold (whole) of Egypt and destroy the Asiatics
despite his dignitaries telling him: we are at peace with our Egypt. 3) He sailed northward to
chase the Asiatics. 4) He intended to flush out the Asiatics and destroy their settlements by
mean of Medjaÿs troop which is east. 5) He sent the troop of Medjays to encircle the rebel
Teti, son of Pepi, within Nefrusy [near Hermopolis], which was a nest of Asiatics who
opposed Egypt. 6) He devastated Nefrusy, demolished its walls, killed its people, taking
booty and crashing slaves. District Nefrusi surrounded. 7) He moored in front of the
citadel (Avaris) and intended to show a time of weakness to Apopi, the prince of Retenu. 8)
He ravaged the land of Avaris, ransacked it, took everything and left nothing (no
inhabitants), made it doom to penury. He burned the settlements of the Asiatics because of
the damage they had done in Egypt. He left not a single board from the 300 ships of Avaris
port and took all beautiful imports from Retenu. 9) Some Egyptians listened to the call of
Asiatics and have abandoned Egypt, their mistress. 10) He captured the messenger, east of
the oasis (in Bahariyah), going back south to send a message to the king of Kush to whom
Apopi was requesting help. 11) He went to the north again which made Apopi afraid.
Apopi's supporters had flew before he fought when his messenger told him what Kamose
had done against the District of Cynopolis which was part of his possessions. Thus,
Kamose never met Apopi. 12) He sent his troop to devastate the oasis of Bahariyah, while
he was at Saka to prevent a rebellion behind him. 13) He sailed southward, destroying any
rebel who was on the road. 14) He arrived in Thebes at the time of Akhet season to
226 C. BARBOTIN – Âhmosis et le début de la XVIIIe dynastie
Paris 2008 Éd. Pygmalion pp. 169-179, 261-263.
227 C. LALOUETTE – Thèbes ou la naissance d'un Empire
Paris 1986 Éd. Arthème Fayard pp. 121, 591 note 63.
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celebrate his seizing the country by force (performed by his defeating the South and his
droving out the North). It is worth noting that the only warlike activity of Kamose, clearly
described, had took place in the south228.
D. O'CONNOR - The Hyksos Period in Egypt
in: The Hyksos: New Historical and Archaeological Perspectives. Philadelphia 1997 pp. 45-63
228
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
This account is full of mysteries. Why did Apopi, who was a powerful pharaoh
(there were, for example, 300 ships in the port city of Avaris, more than Byblos the biggest
port of that time!), disappear in a ditch without fighting? Why did Kamose not mention
what was the serious damage Apopi had done in Egypt? The only rational explanation of
this confused story is the detailed capture of the rebel Teti, the son of Pepi. We can assume
the following scenario: after a serious dispute with Seqenenre (or an unknown reason),
Apopi a Hyksos king would have gone to Palestine accompanied by his supporters
including some Egyptians. In retaliation Kamose plundered the rich city of Avaris, which
had been abandoned. Taking advantage of the situation, the viceroy of Kush, Teti son of
Minhotep, who had already fomented a rebellion in the days of Antef VII229, urged the
Asiatics who remained in the area of Nefrusy (the headquarters of the 16th dynasty were at
Edfu) to support him in his revolt against Egypt (Pepi is the diminutive of Minhotep)230.
Kamose crushed the revolt and captured Teti. The northern land of Kush, called Wawat
(part of the kingdom of Kerma, which had been independent), was annexed to Egypt. The
viceroy of Kush was replaced by Djehuty who was appointed as “king [of Egypt]’s son”.
The Papyrus Rhind231 briefly describes the fall of Avaris and the events that
followed. This papyrus is a copy of a vast mathematical treatise written under Pharaoh
Amenemhat III which is dated: IV Akhet, year 33 of King Apopi232 (below):
Very surprisingly, a scribe has added inside a
blank the following note233 (which has nothing to do
with mathematics)234:
1/
Year 11, II Shemu (1); we entered Heliopolis
I Akhet 23; the mighty dignitary
3/
of the South attacked Tjaru
4/
[day] 25, we heard that
5/
we had entered Tjaru
6/
Year 11, I Akhet 3-birth of Seth [3rd epagomenal day]
7/
his voice is given by the majesty of this god (he thundered)
8/
Birth of Isis [4th epagomenal day], the sky has made rain
2/
Once again, anomalies are numerous: 1) the fall of Avaris is not mentioned (!); 2)
Pharaoh's name is not quoted, only the Prince of the South (?); 3) prior to Kamose, regnal
years were reckoned from I Akhet 1, so it should have been Year 12 (not 11), I Akhet 3-.
Forgetting the name of the Pharaoh seems inexplicable, since Pharaoh's name is specified
in the year 33. As this anonymous pharaoh clearly belongs to the end of the Hyksos era,
speculation about his identification were many: year 11 of Khamudy, Yeneses or Ahmose.
C. LALOUETTE – Thèbes ou la naissance d'un empire
Paris 1986 Éd. Fayard pp. 108-110.
230 C. VANDERSLEYEN - L'Egypte et la vallée du Nil Tome 2
Paris 1995 Éd. Presses Universitaires de France pp. 187-188, 221-226.
231 M. DESSOUDEIX – Lettres égyptiennes. La naissance du Nouvel Empire de Kamosis à Thoutmosis II
Paris 2010 Éd. Actes Sud pp. 62-64.
232 J. VON BECKERATH – Untersuchungen zur politischen Geschichte der Zweiten Zwischenzeit in Ägypten
Glückstadt 1964 Ed. Verlag J.J. Augustin pp.270-279.
233 C. LALOUETTE – Thèbes ou la naissance de l'empire
Paris 1986 Éd. Arthème Fayard p.125.
C. BARBOTIN – Âhmosis et le début de la XVIIIe dynastie
Paris 2008 Éd. Pygmalion pp. 180-182, fac-similé du papyrus Rhind p. 144.
234 The scribe has probably wanted to keep track of these memorable events, not hesitating to include them in a mathematical treatise of
great value.
229
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In fact, the solution is easy: the pharaoh and his crown prince having died within a short
time interval, there was nobody on the throne of Egypt during the evacuation of Avaris at
this time. The scribe therefore wrote a posthumous year 11 [of Seqenenre]. The powerful
dignitary of the South who attacked Tjaru (Tell Hebua)235, a city in Hyksos territory, to
regain control, is clearly Kamose236 (“mighty” is written with the hieroglyph k3 “victorious
bull”, as in the name of Kamose k3-ms “fathered by victorious bull”). The note of the
scribe is preceded by a supply contract where the account237 appears: 1/[...] living for ever. List
of the food in Hebebti 2/[... his] brother, the steward Kamose [...] 3/. The note of the scribe can be
understood as follows: probably shortly before the II Shemu year 11 of Seqenenre, the
pharaoh and his son, Crown Prince Ahmose Sapaïr, must have died shortly before the
evacuation of Avaris, the capital of the Hyksos, which had to be a major trauma for the
Egyptians; 1 month later the army of Kamose entered Heliopolis, then 3 months later
attacked Tjaru which fell in 2 days; 8 days later there was an impressive tempest from the
birth of Seth (3rd epagomenal day), being seen as an evil day.
The career of Kamose is very strange: 1) he bore three
names of Horus (unique case for the 17th Dynasty)238, 2) he is
never mentioned as king of Upper and Lower Egypt in the
documents not written by him; 3) his coffin (opposite figure)
was not gilded and was not equipped with the Royal ureus; 4)
Kamose does not appear on a fresco depicting the royal family
of Seqenenre Taa239 5) his military campaigns are quite similar
to those of Ahmose.
The genealogical reconstitution of Ahmose's family240
imposes chronological synchronisms. Thus Seqenenre had one
(younger) brother, Kamose241; seven daughters (most named
Ahmose); two sons, Ahmose (Sapaïr) and Ahmose I (junior).
The age of Ahmose at his father's death (around 1 year) and
the duration of Kamose's reign (approximately 3 years) are deduced from the mummy of
Ahmose indicating a death between 25 and 30 years old242. Subtracting out this value the
length of his reign, 25 years and 4 months, and the one of Kamose, 3 years minimum, the
calculation gives around 1 year (= 30 - [25 years + 4 months + 3 years]). During these 3
years, Ahmose was crown prince (replacing Ahmose Sapaïr) as the last son of Seqenenre
and Kamose, as the brother of Seqenenre, was the guardian of this crown prince. This
imbroglio explains the following anomalies:
On two rock-inscriptions at Arminna and Toshka in Nubia, the prenomen and nomen
of Kings Kamose and Ahmose, as well as the names of two princes, are inscribed
together. In both inscriptions, the names of Ahmose follow directly below those of
Kamose and each king is given the epithet di ‘nḫ “given life”, which was normally used
of ruling kings. This indicates that both Kamose and Ahmose were ruling when these
M. ABD EL-MAKSOUD – Tell Heboua. L'apport de l'épigraphie
in: Revue d'Égyptologie 56 (2006) pp. 1-43.
236 “mighty” is written with the hieroglyph k3 “victorious bull”, as in the name of Kamose “fathered by victorious bull (k3-ms)”.
237 T.E. PEET – The Rhind Mathematical Papyrus
London 1923 Ed. The University Press of Liverpool Limited pp. 128-129.
238 N. GRIMAL - Histoire de l'Égypte ancienne
Paris 1988 Éd. Fayard p. 254.
239 A. DODSON, D. HYLTON – The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt
London 2010 Ed. Thames & Hudson Ltd, pp. 122-126.
240 M. DESSOUDEIX – Chronique de l'Égypte ancienne
Paris 2008 Éd. Actes Sud pp. 245-255.
241 K.S.B. RYHOLT – The Political Situation in Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period c. 1800-1500 B.C.
Copenhagen 1997, Ed. Carsten Niebuhr Institute Publications Vol. 20 p. 309.
242 I. SHAW, P. NICHOLSON – The Dictionary of Ancient Egypt
London 1995 Ed. The British Museum Press p. 18.
235
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
inscriptions were cut and consequently that they were coregents243.
An axe belonging to Ahmose represents him adult in the
process of defeating the Hyksos (opposite figure),
although it is Kamose who expelled them, according to
the stele of year 3. At the time of the expulsion Ahmose
was 1 year old, he could not have driven fighting teams!
In his biography the soldier Ahmes son of Abana
describes his career under the King of Upper and Lower
Egypt (nsw-bity), Seqenenre. He then describes his acts of
bravery at the time of the Master of the Two Lands (nb
t3wy) Ahmose, with the looting of Avaris, the siege and
then the ransacking of Sharuhen244 in year 3, the only
date of his account, as in Kamose's stela, and finally the
crushing of a Nubian revolt. He states that he had the privilege of accompanying his
(anonymous) Sovereign (ity) when he was travelling in his war chariot. As Ahmose was 4
years old when he began reigning, the (anonymous) Sovereign had to be Kamose.
Although liberator of Egypt, having opposed the Hyksos and having defeated the
Nubians, Kamose is not the 1st king of the 18th dynasty but Ahmose is.
In the Buhen stele of Ahmes, Kamose is called “mighty ruler”, not “king of Upper and
Lower Egypt”, and in the Buhen stele of Iy (Nubia) dated regnal year 3, III Shemu 10
(the enthronment name of Senwosret I (Kheper-ka-re) took place of Kamose's name245).
The epithet “the Ruler (p3 ḥq3)” is sometimes included in the second cartouche in place
of the name Kamose. A practice which was still attested under his successor Ahmose.
In Emheb's stele, at Edfu, describing the confrontation at Avaris, year 3 is anonymous
and there is a curious dualism between “god” and “prince” concerning the king's title.
In the stele of Kamose, at Buhen, despite its incomplete state, the title of King of Upper
and Lower Egypt is this time attributed to Kamose as in the stele of year 3.
The sarcophagus of Kamose contains many wealthy objects with Ahmose's name.
In a royal chronology, appearing in a private document of the Third Intermediate
Period, King Apopi is the immediate predecessor of King Ahmose.
From Ahmose, regnal years no longer start at I Akhet 1 but from the date of accession.
We can assume the following scenario: after a serious quarrel with Seqenenre (for
an unknown reason), Apopi decided to leave for Retenu and evacuate the city of Avaris.
Shortly afterwards, both the crown prince and pharaoh die suddenly. Kamose, Seqenenre's
brother, was ordered to hand back the country and the young Ahmose was appointed as
the new crown prince to replace his older brother. Kamose thus acted as representative of
the young Ahmose. In the past, until the 5th dynasty, pharaohs were enthroned only with a
Horus name. In time, the complete titulature had five names, but only two were actually
used, the enthronement name and the birth name. The birth name aside, which did not
change (except for some additional laudatory), other names could be changed to indicate a
new political or religious program. For Kamose his 1st Horus name was "He who appears
on his throne", the 2nd "He who subdues the two Lands" and the 3rd "He who nourishes
the two Lands". These 3 names match his 3 years of reign246. Historical reconstruction:
K.S.B. RYHOLT – The Political Situation in Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period c. 1800-1500 B.C.
Copenhagen 1997, Ed. Carsten Niebuhr Institute Publications Vol. 20 pp. 273-274.
244 L. HABACHI – The Second Stela of Kamose and his Struggle against the Hyksos Ruler and his Capital
Glückstadt 1972 Ed. Verlag J.J. Augustin pp.31-67.
245 D.B. REDFORD – Textual Sources for the Hyksos Period
in: The Hyksos: New Historical and Archaeological Perspectives. Philadelphia (1997) pp. 5, 12.
246 C. VANDERSLEYEN - L'Egypte et la vallée du Nil Tome 2
Paris 1995 Éd. Presses Universitaires de France p. 195.
243
65
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
66
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
year
1534 1
1533
1532
1531
1530
1530
2
3
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5
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X
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VIII
IX
X
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I
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VIII
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IX
[A]
10
[B]
[C]
[D]
[A] Taa Seqenenre King of Upper Egypt
[B] Ahmose Sapaïr Crown Prince
[C] Teti son of Pepi Vice-roy of Kush
[D] Apopi Aauserre Hyksos King (Lower Egypt)
11
***
***
(1)
???
Avaris, capital of Hyksos, is evacuated then sacked
[B] Kamose Prince of the South (Thebes)
Tjaru is sacked
[D] Apopi Ruler of Retenu (Palestine)
[A] Ahmose Crown Prince
[B] Kamose Horus (1) of Egypt
(2)
Hebrews near Sharuhen (Numbers 1:1, 14:34-45)
(3)
[B] Kamosis Horus (2) of Egypt
3
***
1
-
Nefrusy is sacked
Wawat is annexed
Buhen stele of Iy dated year 3 of Senwosret I, III Shemu 10
Sharuhen is sacked
[B] Kamose Horus (3) of Egypt
[C] Djehuti Vice-roy of Kush
[A] Ahmose King of Upper and Lower Egypt
[B] Ahhotep coregent
Regnal years do not begin at I Akhet 1 any more
2
-
Julian calendar: Spring equinox = April 3 (in 1533 BCE)
Egyptian calendar: (month I, day 1) = September 10 (in 1533 BCE)
Babylonian calendar: (month I, day 1) = April 11 (in 1533 BCE)
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
This two-headed system of command, King and co-regent, obviously led to a dual
assignment in royal actions. Inscriptions, however, officially recognize only the king title.
For example, Hatshepstut, although co-regent, dated her documents on behalf of
Thutmose III (or Thutmose I for ‘his’ sed festival). Royal inscriptions are always
complimentary to kings and their victories (obviously complete and grandiose), thus the socalled victory over the Hyksos should have been commented by Ahmose, but it was not.
The chronological reconstruction of the so-called war of the Hyksos shows that in
fact it was carried out in two phases: first a police operation to loot and ransack the big city
of Avaris (capital of the Hyksos) and the town of Sharuhen, then a war dated in year 3 of
Kamose in order to annex the Nubian kingdom of Kerma, a former ally of the Hyksos.
The majority of stelae describing a war are dated year 3 [of Kamose] and were erected at
Edfu, capital of the 16th Dynasty247, which indirectly confirm the place of the war (south of
Egypt). These stelae inscriptions, such as the Emhab stela248, are among the most
problematic and controversial ancient Egyptian texts. However, most textual difficulties
have arisen when translators approached the inscription out of context, forcing new
meanings on words and expressions to make the Egyptian text only an account of quarry
dispute or drumming contest249 (Egyptologists are fond of fanciful interpretations). In fact,
Emhab narrated his battle against a mysterious figure called tmrhtn(t) which led to victory
over 7,000 enemies, apparently after a struggle between two important characters (lines 68). During the campaign against Kerma and Avaris, Emhab followed his lord (nb), in all
places and at all times (lines 4 and 13), and even took the lead when his lord —most likely
Kamose, because in his inscription Emhab says (line 11): He is a god (ntr), while I am a ruler
(ḥq3)— came back to Lower Egypt (lines 15-16). In addition to his military bravery, Emhab
provided economic support for Upper Egypt during the war (lines 10-11), sending tax
agents to collect supplies and revenue (line 5). In the course of this short inscription,
Emhab sketched a biography of an ideal regional administrator during a time of war. It is
noteworthy that this inscription includes an anomaly in the reckoning of regnal years: renpet
3 “year 3” (line 8), indicating the number of years, instead of the usual regnal years hat-sep 3.
A number of biographical inscriptions show that the military conflict between the
Egyptians at the end of the 17th Dynasty only concerned the kingdom of Kush250:
• I am a strong servant of the ruler [ḥq3] of Kush. I wash my feet in the waters of Kush while
following the ruler Ndḥ.
• I am a strong commander of Buhen. Never did any commander do what I did. I built the temple of
Horus, Lord of Buhen, to the delight of the ruler [ḥq3] of Kush.
• I am a powerful warrior entering Edfu. I took <my> wife, children and household away from the
south of Kush in 13 days.
• I am a powerful warrior of the strong ruler [ḥq3] [Ka]mose, given life. I brought 46 head of people
while following the ruler, given life.
• I am one who follow his lord [nb] on his journeys, one who do not fail in (any) statement he makes
(...) I will fight against him (i.e. an enemy mentioned before) in endurance (...) I reached Mjw (in
Nubia) without counting every land while I followed him day and night, and I reached Avaris.
The loyalty of the provincial officials was an important basis for the re-conquest of
Egypt, enabling Kamose and Ahmose to unite these local powers into a single force.
C. BARBOTIN – Âhmosis et le début de la XVIIIe dynastie
Paris 2008 Éd. Pygmalion pp. 169-202.
248 J. BAINES – The Stela of Emhab: Innovation, Tradition, Hierarchy
in: The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 72, (1986), pp. 41-53.
249 D. KLOTZ – Emhab versus the tmrhtn: Monomachy and the Expulsion of the Hyksos
in: Studien zur Altägyptischen Kultur 39 (2010) pp. 211-241.
250 S. KUBISCH – Biographies of the Thirteenth to Seventeeth Dynasties
in: The Second Intermediate Period (Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 192, 2010) pp. 323-325.
247
67
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
68
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
The only record that describes the so-called war of the Hyksos in the field, and not
according to official propaganda, comes from an officer of El-kab, Ahmose son of Abana,
whose autobiography is in his tomb251:
1/
The chief of the rowers, Ahmose son of Abana, 2/says: « I want to speak to you, all people. I
want you to be aware of the distinctions that are due to me: I was rewarded with gold seven times 3/facing
the entire country and the servants alike. I have been endowed with so many fields, my name is strong for
what I did, safe in this 4/country ever ». He says: « It is in the city of Nekheb (El-kab) I grew up, when
my father was a soldier of late King of Upper and Lower Egypt Seqenenre. Baba, son of 5/Ro-inet was his
name. Then I was a soldier in his place in the boat “the Wild Bull”, at the time of late Lord of Two
Lands Nebpehtyre (Ahmose). 6/I was (yet) a young man, I had not yet married, I slept in a hammock.
Then I founded a home. So, I was taken aboard 7/the ship “the Septentrion” since my excellence, I walked
in the wake of the Sovereign (ity), life, integrity, health, when he was travelling in his 8/chariot. They laid
siege to the city of Avaris and I behaved valiantly, in the field, before His Majesty. So I was then assigned
to 9/the (ship) “Emergence in Memphis” and they fought on the water, the channel Padjedkou of Avaris.
So I made the catch. 10/I brought 1 hand, something that was repeated to the royal herald: I was given the
gold of valour. Then the fighting resumed in this place and I made the catch. 11/I brought 1 hand and I was
given the gold of valour again. Then they fought in the part of Egypt which is south of this city. 12/I brought
a prisoner alive after plunging into the water. Look, he was returned as taken from the side of the 13/city
and it is by stating that I crossed the water. This having been reported to the royal herald, my reward was
the gold again. 14/Then they began to plunder Avaris and I brought back the spoils: 1 man and 3 women,
a total of 4 (individuals). His Majesty's attributed to me as slaves. 15/Then they besieged Sharuhen in year
3 and His Majesty sacked it. So I brought back the spoils: 2 women and 1 hand, 16/and I was given the
gold of bravery. Look, I was awarded my taken as slaves! And then, His Majesty slew the Sinai Bedouins.
17/
It went up the Nile as far Khenthennefer (south of the second cataract) to destroy the Nubian archers.
Her Majesty is doing a great slaughter among them. 18/So I brought back as booty 2 men, 2 ears and 3
hands. I was rewarded with gold once again and, look, I was given two maids. 19/His Majesty sailed north,
his heart swelling with joy by the bravery and victory, because it had seized the South and North. 20/So is
the rebel Aata came to the South, his destiny was to be destroyed. The gods of the South seized him and he
was discovered by His Majesty in Tentaâmu. His Majesty took 21/him prisoner each of his people being an
easy prey. So I brought 2 captured warriors on the ship the rebel Aata 22/and he gave me 5 persons and 5
shared arourai field in my city. He was doing the same for all the crew. Then came this vile enemy, 23/his
name was Tetian (Teti-the-beautiful) who had gathered around him his rebels. His Majesty killed him, his
associates (of Tetian) were as if they had not existed. 24/Then they gave me 3 persons and 5 arourai field in
my city. So I carried late King of Upper and Lower Egypt Djeserkare (Amenohotep I) as he sailed
southward towards Kush to expand 25/the borders of Egypt. His Majesty overthrew this vile Nubian
nomad midst of his army which was taken tied, those who had fled 26/were laying as if they had not existed
while I was at the head of our army. I fought in truth and His Majesty saw my bravery. I brought back 2
hands which were presented to 27/His Majesty and his people were sought and his cattle. Then I brought a
prisoner who was brought alive to His Majesty. I guided his Majesty for 2 days to Egypt 28/(passing)
through the eastern wells. Then I was rewarded with gold and I brought back as booty by 2 maids over
what I had presented to 29/His Majesty (before). Then I was promoted to the rank of “Ruler's Warrior”.
Then I carried late King of Upper and Lower Egypt Âakheperkare (Thutmose I) while sailing south
towards Khenthennefer 30/to destroy the rebellion through the mountainous regions and to repel an invasion
from the desert regions.
The events are recorded in a chronological order252. Early in his career, Ahmes
states that at Ahmose's time he accompanied the Sovereign in his chariot (line 8). The
hieroglyphic sign of the chariot can even inform us about its shape (see below). The
C. BARBOTIN – Âhmosis et le début de la XVIIIe dynastie
Paris 2008 Éd. Pygmalion pp. 197-202.
252 C. VANDERSLEYEN - L'Egypte et la vallée du Nil Tome 2
Paris 1995 Éd. Presses Universitaires de France pp. 213-216.
251
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
Sovereign (ity) is not named, but as he got into in his chariot the king was bound to be an
adult. As Ahmose was 1 year old at that time, it might be Kamose. In addition, the facts
related are identical to those described in the stele of year 3.
Ahmes laid siege to the city of Avaris and behaved valiantly (in
fact, he took only 1 man in the Padjedku channel of Avaris) and
plundered Avaris (no fight is mentioned). He besieged Sharuhen in
year 3 and His Majesty sacked it. Sharuhen is besieged in year 3
(same date in Kamose's Stele), not for 3 years, for at least three
reasons: 1) as Kamose crushed the powerful viceroy of Kush in a single military campaign,
Sharuhen, which was a small city, could not hold out long against Kamose's army, 2) no
army at that time could sustain a siege of more than 1 year (the mighty Thutmose III
besieged the city of Megiddo for 7 months); 3) such a memorable siege would have been
recounted, but only a sack of the city is mentioned. The only battles and slaughters that are
detailed all took place in southern Egypt and involved only Nubian rebels. Given the low
numbers of prisoners and the small number of deaths, these Egyptian troops would be
better described as squads of police rather than regiments of war.
The soldier Ahmose son of Abana did not mention Kamose in his autobiography
like the soldier Ahmose son of Pennekhbet who described his service253 under successive
Kings (nsw): Ahmose then Amenhotep I, Thutmose I, Thutmose II, Ruler (ḥq3) and finally under
Thutmose III. Queen Hatshepsut is not mentioned by name but by Ruler (coregent's title).
The chariot used as an offensive weapon appears for the 1st time under the reign of
Kamose. This is confirmed by the relief of the “fall of Avaris” reconstituted (below) thanks
to the many fragments found at Abydos in the temple next to the pyramid of Ahmose254.
Although no direct text accompanying this scene has been found, many internal details,
however, allow its identification as the presence of ships, the names of Apopi and Avaris as
well as representation of the weapons used.
The use of horses by the Egyptians proves that there had been no war with the
Hyksos because as they came from Palestine they knew horse domestication, already
performed in Syria and Mari since 1700 BCE, and had brought this animal to Egypt255. If
there had been a war with the Egyptians, the Hyksos would have used their own horses
and would have prevailed.
M. DESSOUDEIX – Chronique de l'Égypte ancienne
Paris 2008 Éd. Actes Sud pp. 113-132.
254 S.P. HARVEY - The Cults of King Ahmose at Abydos
Michigan 1998 Ed. UMI Dissertation Services pp. 316-353, 529-550.
255 J.R. KUPPER -Les nomades en Mésopotamie au temps des rois de Mari
Paris 1957, Ed. Librairie Droz pp. 35-37.
253
69
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
70
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
Apopi’s name (written i-p-p) appears, for example, on a
fragment (lower arrow in the drawing) and an Asiatic
recognizable by his fringed garment and his dagger sword (top
arrow). On the relief of Ahmose, several Asiatic warriors (in later
representations they have two bands crossed over the chest with
a collar, which identifies them as Hyksos) are represented falling,
pierced by arrows. A small fragment of a relief immersed,
discovered in the same context, named Avaris, the capital of the
Hyksos (with the same spelling as in the Stele of Kamose). The
arrows used by archers are Nubian, we know they were used by
Nubian archers loyal to Kamose, the Madjaÿs, during the siege of
Avaris. The ships represented on the relief are warships such as
the "vulture" (the Nile was used to transport troops). The
description of a grain crop in a context of war is very surprising
and might suggest that a famine caused by strategy was
associated with this war. The relief of Ahmose therefore is in full
agreement with the indications given by the Stela of Kamose, but
is an absolutely new type of representation in Egyptian art.
Later representations of this "battle" are most prolific in detail, like the one shown
on two panels of a chariot of Thutmose IV256 (below).
Careful examination of protagonists reveals that only Nubians are portrayed with
arms (the archers who oppose the Pharaoh), which is not the case of Asiatics identifiable
by their beards. In addition, some Asiatics (indicated by an arrow) wear two bands crossed
over their chest with a collar, which is a characteristic of Hyksos soldiers (the depiction
contains an anachronism since the chariot of Pharaoh has eight spokes while those of his
opponents have four, as at the time of Ahmose). Egyptians undertook several aggressive
campaigns against Nubia (land of Kush) and conducted only a few raids of intimidation in
northern Sinai, Syria and Mitanni257, but nothing specific, except threats, against Retenu
where the ancient Hyksos258 fled.
J. B. PRITCHARD - The Ancient Near East in Pictures
Princeton 1969 Ed. Princeton University Press pp. 103-104
257 C. VANDERSLEYEN - L'Egypte et la vallée du Nil Tome 2
Paris 1995 Éd. Presses Universitaires de France pp. 225-257.
258 G.N. KNOPPERS, A. HIRSCH - Egypt, Israel, and the Ancient Mediterranean World
Leiden 2004 Ed. Brill pp. 121-141.
256
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
71
If Ahmose doesn’t detail the war against the Hyksos he insists, on the other hand,
on two issues: “he is now the king of Lower Egypt (stele at Karnak) and the events that
preceded his reign were terrible (Tempest Stele)”. The stele of Ahmose at Karnak reads259:
The King of Upper and Lower Egypt, lord of the Two Lands, Nebpehtyre, the son of Re, his
beloved, Ahmose, living forever, the son of Amun-Re, his beloved (...) whose valiance is terrific, he who
subdues the rebel, gives life and establishes Maat, the king of Lower Egypt for the kings in all countries, the
sovereign, life-integrity-health, who tamed the Two Banks (Egypt), great in the terror he inspires, whose
coronation commands the Nubian archers kneeling (...) he ruled over what surrounds sun's course, the white
crown and the red crown set upon his head, the shares of Horus and Seth are under his authority, he whose
pictures appeared in glory from his childhood (...) This is a king of the North that Ra made sovereign,
Amun made great. May they grant the banks and the countries all at once (...) This is a King of Lower
Egypt unique, a disciple of the star Sirius, the favourite of Sehat. The prestige of Thoth is by his side: may
he deign to grant him know the rituals! (Thus) he will lead the scribes according to exact rules. It is a large
holder of magic, who provides love of him more than any king of Lower Egypt (...) Follow this King of
Lower Egypt in his campaigns, spread his empire by other people (...) honour him as for Ra, adore him as
for the moon, he the king of Upper and Lower Egypt Nebpehtyre, living forever, who tames any foreign
land (...) Glorify the Lady, the Queen of the banks of Hau-nebu [eastern Delta], whose reputation is high
over any foreign land, who fulfils the will of the multitude, the wife of the king [Seqenenre], the sister of the
Sovereign [Kamose], life-integrity-health, the daughter of the king [Senakhtenre], the august mother of the
king [Ahmose], who knows the business, who unites Egypt; she gathered its worthies whom she assured
cohesion and took back its fugitives, she merged its dissidents and has pacified Upper Egypt, she has pushed
its rebels, wife of King, Ahhotep, living.
Ahmose's statement confirms two important points: first, the war against the
Hyksos (there is no mention) occurred before his reign. He focuses particularly on his new
role as King of Lower Egypt, then, how his mother, Queen Ahhotep260, managed to bring
home some Egyptian dissidents (who followed Apopi) and pushing (not crushing) some
rebels (Hyksos). Family ties of Queen Ahhotep clarify two other points: 1) Kamose was the
brother of Seqenenre since Ahhotep was the daughter of Seqenenre, the granddaughter of
Senakhtenre and the sister of Kamose; 2) Kamose was co-regent, not king since the titles
are different: king [Senakhtenre] king [Seqenenre], Sovereign [Kamose], and king
[Ahmose]. In fact, the main events commented by Ahmose in his inscriptions concern his
family261 (Ahmose was Seqenenre's son and Senakhtenre's grandson)262. Thus we know, for
example, that his mother Ahhotep assured his regency from year 1 to 20; toward year 18,
Satkamose his first wife died; he then married Ahmes Nefertari; his mother died around
year 20 at the time of Amenhotep I's birth. This event marked a new era263, as the
hieroglyphic sign of the moon consisting of a crescent with two points upward will
definitely change (unique in Egyptian history) and would turn downward from year 20 of
Ahmose. Evolution over time of Ahmose's name (or Iahmes) "begotten of Moon":
17th Dynasty
beginning of 18th Dynasty
18th Dynasty
The beginning of the reign of Ahmose was relatively peaceful since no incidents
were reported. A graffito in hieratic dated year 2, found in the tomb of Sobeknakht at ElC. BARBOTIN – Âhmosis et le début de la XVIIIe dynastie
Paris 2008 Éd. Pygmalion pp. 210-214.
260 C. VANDERSLEYEN – Les guerres d'Amosis
Bruxelles 1971 Éd. Fondation égyptologique reine Élisabeth pp. 135-228.
261 T. STASSER – La famille d'Amosis
in: Chronique d'Égypte LXXVII (2002) Fasc. 153-154 pp. 23-46.
262 S. BISTON-MOULIN – Le roi Sénakht-en-Rê Ahmès de la XVIIe dynastie
in: Égypte Nilotique et Méditerranéene 5 (2012) pp. 61-71.
263 The accession of Ahmose is dated around IV Peret 1 which coincided in his year 19 (in 1512 BCE) with a full moon (April 3).
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SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
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kab, provides insignificant information. Another graffito264 carved on a block of a chapel at
Karnak simply says this: In year 5, II Akhet 12, level of the great inundation. The chancellor of the
king of Lower Egypt and general in chief Ah[mose] came. The most surprising information that
Ahmose gave about the Hyksos period, which preceded his reign, comes from the “stele of
the storm” or “Tempest Stele” dated year 1 (line 0). A high resolution readout made it
possible to restore almost all of this stele265:
L. COTELLE-MICHEL – Présentation préliminaire des blocs de la chapelle de Sésostris Ier
in: Cahiers de Karnak 11 (2003) p. 348.
265 M. WIENER, J.P. ALLEN Separate Lives: The Ahmose Tempest Stela and the Theran Eruption
in: Near Eastern Studies 57 (1998) 1 pp. 1-28.
264
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
[Regnal Year 1 ... during the Incarnation of the Horus "Great of Developments." Two] Ladies
"Perfect of Birth," Gold Falcon "Who knots together the Two Lands," King of Upper and Lower Egypt
Nebpehtyre. Son of Re Ahmose, alive forever—at the coming of His Incarnation [to ... ], the Sun himself
having designated him king; for though His Incarnation had settled in the harbour-town of "Provisioner of
the Two Lands" [...] of the south of Dendera, A[mun-Re, lord of thrones of the Two Lands] was in
Thebes. Then His Incarnation sailed upstream to [give him a] pure [...]. Now, after this offer[ing ceremony
... th]em, and they were put on the [... in/of] this [nome], while the processional image [...], his body united
with this temple, his limbs in joy. [Then His Incarnation sailed downstream to the Palace, lph. But] this
great [god] was desiring [that] His Incarnation [return to him, while] the gods were asking for [all] their
cult-services.
[Then] the gods [made] the sky come in a storm of r[ain, with dark]ness in the western region and
the sky beclouded without [stop, loud]er than [the sound of] the subjects, strong[er than ..., howling(?)] on
the hills more than the sound of the cavern in Elephantine. Then every house and every habitation they
reached [perished and those in them died, their corpses] floating on the water like skiffs of papyrus, (even) in
the doorway and the private apartments (of the palace), for a period of up to [...] days, while no torch could
give light over the Two Lands. Then His Incarnation said: « How much greater is this than the impressive
manifestation of the great god, than the plans of the gods! » What His Incarnation did was to go down to
his launch, with his council behind him and [his] army on the east and west (kinks) providing cover, there
being no covering on them after the occurrence of the god's impressive manifestation. What His Incarnation
did was to arrive at the interior of Thebes, and gold encountered the gold of this processional image, so that
he received what he had desired. Then His Incarnation was stabilizing the Two Lands and guiding the
flooded areas. He did not stop, feeding them with silver, with gold, with copper, with oils and clothing, with
every need that could be desired.
What His Incarnation did was to rest in the Palace, lph. Then one was reminding His
Incarnation of the entering of the sacred estates, the dismantling of tombs, the hacking up of mortuary
enclosures, and the toppling of pyramids — how what had never been done (before) had been done. Then
His Incarnation commanded to make firm the temples that had fallen to ruin in this entire land: to make
functional the monuments of the gods, to erect their enclosure walls, to put the sacred things in the special
room. to hide the secret places, to cause the processional images that were fallen to the ground to enter their
shrines, to set up the braziers, to erect the altars and fix their offering-loaves, to double the income of officeholders — to put the land like its original situation. Then it was done like everything that His Incarnation
commanded to do.
This inscription confirms three points: 1) the disaster linked to Hyksos occurred
before the reign of Ahmose and it affected all Egypt; 2) the unprecedented violence of
climatic elements explains the consternation of Seqenenre and his council when they met
Apopi; 3) the origin of this conflict is linked to the Hyksos deity (Apopi's single god),
because of the amazing sentence: « How much greater is this than the impressive manifestation of the
great god, than the plans of the gods! ». Regarding this last point Queen Hatshepsut266 is even
more explicit: Listen to him, you, namely all patricians and common folk in its multitude! I did these
things by the design of my heart and the forgotten one shall not sleep for me! While I restored what have
been devastated, I levied the foremost draft since Asiatics were in the region of Avaris of Lower Egypt.
Resident aliens among them were disregarding the assigned tasks. They ruled without Re‘ who would not be
blind when the god (Amun) assigned the steering rope to my Majesty. When I was established over the
thrones of Re‘, I became known through a period of years as a born conqueror. And when I came as Horus,
my uraeus threw fire against my opponents. I have banished the abomination of the gods, the earth removed
their footprints! This is (governance of) the father of fathers, the Sun, who (now) comes at his dates.
Damage will not happen (again), for Amun has decreed that my decree remain like the mountains.
H. GOEDICKE – The Speos Artemidos Inscription of Hatshepsut and Related Discussions
Oakville 2004 Ed. Halgo, Inc. pp. 76-91, 102-104.
J.P. ALLEN – The Speos Artemidos Inscription of Hatshepsut
in: Bulletin of the Egyptological Selminar 16 (2002) pp. 1-17.
266
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THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
Ahmose's reign had been peaceful. Ahhotep's regency was even a brilliant
restoration of Egyptian authority. It was during this recovery period, which lasted 20 years,
that king's counsellors were the most active. In respect of the court etiquette, advising the
pharaoh was usually given in the form of a timeless (and archaizing) wisdom with the
guarantee of an illustrious predecessor267 having sometimes experienced a similar situation.
This is the case of The Teaching for King Merikare268. Although this teaching is assigned to
Merikare, this text should rather be dated to the beginning of the 18th Dynasty for the
following reasons269: this teaching is completely unknown before and is never mentioned
by any previous document; the conflict with Asiatics which is described as catastrophical, is
identical to the one mentioned in Tempest Stele under Ahmose; Antef II, in the last year of
his reign (year 50), said he seized the thinite nome wholly. He speaks as if Thebes took
possession of it for the first time. Moreover, nothing in the inscriptions of nomarchs at this
time let one think about a state of war or of any disorders270. The Teaching seems to have
been written around year 20 of Ahmose, which coincides with the end Ahhotep's regency.
Indeed, the note: Quarry stones from Tura and do not construct your tomb through recycled materials is
consistent with the fact that King Ahmose started to build his pyramid (actually a cenotaph
at Abydos) from year 22. The remark: For these 20 years, recruits have been at ease, following their
heart, and the military goes forth in strength. Those who are recruited enlist voluntarily like young men
trained [and strengthened]. It is (our) ancestry which fights on our behalf, contradicts interpretations
assuming a King Ahmose who would lead a war against the Hyksos.
The beginning of the Instruction made by the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Khet]y, for his
son, Merikare [...] But whose many partisans are now a multitude and respect him for his possessions and
for his cleverness, one who has gained (men’s) confidence and has ingratiated himself in the sight of his
dependents, and who persists as a troublemaker and a spreader of talk, get rid of him, and slay his
children, obliterate his name, and destroy his supporters, banish (all) memory of him and of the partisans
who respect him a seditious man is liable to incite the citizens And create two groups of malcontents among
the youth. If, therefore, you find that there is such a one among the citizens, [A ...] whose actions challenge
you, denounce him before the officials and get rid of him, for he is indeed a rebel (...) Be proficient in speech,
so that you may be strong, for the strength of a king is his tongue. Words are mightier than any struggle,
And no one can outsmart him who is skilled of heart, [But you will sit secure] upon the throne. The wise
man is a bulwark (even) for officials, And those who are aware of his knowledge dare not assail him. No
evil happens in his presence (...) Show due respect to the nobles, support your people, fortify your borders and
your buffer zones, for it is expedient to work for the future (...) Punish by means of flogging and
imprisonment, for thus will this land be kept in good order, except for the rebel who has contrived his plots.
But God is aware of the rebel, and God will smite his evil with blood (...) The ba will return to the place
which it knows, and it will not wander from its familiar ways; all magic rituals will be unable to oppose it
(...) Marshall your troops so that the Residence may respect you; increase your supporters in the military.
Behold, your cities are filled with new generations; For these 20 years, recruits have been at ease, following
their heart, and the military goes forth in strength. Those who are recruited enlist voluntarily like young men
trained [and strengthened]. It is (our) ancestry which fights on our behalf, and I was raised up from it on
my succession. Elevate your officials, promote your fighters; bestow wealth upon the young men of your
followers, provide them with possessions, confer fields upon them, and endow them with cattle. Make no
distinction between a well-born man and a commoner, but take a man into your service because of his deeds.
W.K. SIMPSON – The Literature of Ancient Egypt
Cairo 2005 Ed. Yale University Press pp. 125-243.
268 P. VERNUS – Sagesses de l'Égypte pharaonique
Paris 2010 Éd. Thesaurus Actes Sud pp. 179-213.
269 A.M. GNIRS – Das Motiv des Bürgerkriegs in Merikare und Neferti. Zur Literatur der 18. Dynastie
in: jn.t dr.w Festschrift für Friedrich Junge (Göttingen 2006) pp. 207-265.
270 C. VANDERSLEYEN - L'Egypte et la vallée du Nil Tome 2
Paris 1995 Éd. Presses Universitaires de France pp. 6-11.
267
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
Let every occupation be carried on [...] for the Lord of might. Keep guard over your border, and strengthen
your forts, for troops are profitable to their lord. Erect [many] monuments for God (...) But enemies will
not be calm within Egypt, for troops will fight troops, as (our) ancestors foretold, and Egypt will fight/ in
the necropolis, destroying the tombs with havoc time and again. I did the same, and the same will happen
(again), as is done by him who likewise transgresses against God. Do not be too stern with the southern
territory, for you know what the Residence advises about it. It has happened (in the past), just as such
things may happen (again). There was no attack on their part, even as they maintained, but yet I advanced
upon Thinis right to its southern border at Tawer (...) Granite comes to you without interruption, so do not
destroy the monuments of another. Quarry stones from Tura and do not construct your tomb through
salvaged materials (...) I brought peace to the entire west as far as the area of the lake; (Now) it serves (me)
of its own accord and produces meru-wood, one may now see the juniper wood which they give us. The east
abounds with foreigners, and their taxes [pour in]. The Middle Island has returned (to us) and every man
within it. The temples say: ‘‘O Great One, (all) men revere you.’’ Behold, the land which they had destroyed
has been established as nomes, and all the great cities [have been rebuilt]. What had been governed by one
man is now under the control of ten; officials are appointed, taxes are levied, and every responsibility is
clearly understood. When free men are granted a plot of land, they serve you like a single company; such
ensures that no one among them will be discontent. The Nile flood will cause you no worry by failing to
come, and the revenues of the Delta are in your hand behold, the mooring post which I have made in the
east is secure, from Hebenu to the Way of Horus, well settled with towns and full of people, the choicest of
the entire land, to drive back / any attacks against them. May I see a brave man who will emulate this,
one who will for his own sake add even more to what I have done. I would be worried by an heir who is
ineffective. But as concerns the foreigners, let this be said: The vile Asiatic is miserable because of the place
wherein he is, shortage of water, lack of many trees, and the paths thereof difficult because of the mountains.
He has never settled in one place, but plagued by want, he wanders the deserts on foot. He has been fighting
ever since the time of Horus. He neither conquers nor can he be conquered. He does not announce the day of
fighting, but is like a thief whom society has expelled. However, as I live / and shall be what I am, these
foreigners were like a sealed fortress which I had surrounded and besieged. I caused the Delta to strike them,
I captured their people and seized their cattle to the point that the Asiatics detested Egypt. Do not distress
your heart on his account, for the Asiatic is only a crocodile on its riverbank which attacks on a lonely road
but does not invade the area of a crowded town. Unite Medenit to its [nome], take possession of its adjacent
territory as far as Kem-Wer, for behold, it is a lifeline against the foreigners. Its walls are a defence, its
soldiers are numerous, and the serfs within it adept at carrying weapons, as are the free citizens within it.
As for the region of Djedsut, it totals 10,000 men, Both serfs and free citizens exempt from taxation.
Officials have been in it ever since it was the Residence; well established are its borders, and mighty are its
garrisons. Many northerners irrigate it as far as the borders of the Delta, taxed with grain after the fashion
of free citizens. For him who achieves (all) this, it will be means of surpassing me. Behold, it is the gateway
to the Delta, and they have formed a protection as far as / Neni-nesut. Well-populated cities mean
satisfaction, but beware of being surrounded by the supporters of a foe. Vigilance prolongs one’s years.
Equip your border against the lands to the south, for they are aliens who take up the panoply of war.
Construct buildings in the Delta, for a man’s name will not be demeaned by what he has accomplished, and
a securely founded town will not be destroyed; so build mansions for your image. An enemy loves anguish,
and his actions are despicable. (...) But as for him who revolts against you, this is (like) a destruction of
heaven, (like) destroying a hundred years of monuments. If an enemy is prudent, he will not destroy them,
In hope that his action may be affirmed by another who comes after him; But there is no one who does not
have an / enemy. The (ruler) of the two banks is intelligent. The king, the lord of courtiers, will not act
foolishly. He was wise even at his coming forth from the womb, and God has made him preeminent over the
land above countless others (...) Behold, a dreadful incident occurred in my time: The nome of Thinis was
laid desolate. Indeed, it did not happen through anything I had done, and I learned of it only after it had
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been committed. Behold my abomination! What I did is all too plain! Verily, destruction is detestable. It is
pointless for a man to repair what he has destroyed or to rebuild what he has torn down. Beware of such!
Affliction will be requited in kind, and every deed committed has its consequence. One generation of mortals
follows another, but God, the all-knowing, has concealed himself. There is none who can resist the might of
the Lord of the Land (...) He has slain the rebellious among them, as if a man would smite his son for the
sake of his brother. And God knows every name. Make no detraction from my discourse, for it establishes
all the precepts of kingship. Instruct yourself, so that you may rise up as a man, and then you will equal me,
and none will indict you (...) Implant love for yourself in the entire land, for a good disposition means being
remembered, even after years are past and gone. May you be called ‘‘Destroyer of the Time of Evil’’ By
those who are among the descendants of the house of Khety, And may they pray, ‘‘Let him return this (very)
day!’’ Behold, I have told you the best of my thoughts; may you conduct yourself in accordance with what is
laid out before you. Both the Teaching for King Merikare and the Tempest Stele agree. The
description of events, according to the Tempest Stele, has several amazing items: 1) a storm
of extraordinary intensity affected the whole of Egypt, 2) the country was left in total
darkness (during 9 days, according to the inscription of naos 2248271), 4) the storm
decimated the people including the Palace, and 5) dead bodies floated down the Nile like
skiffs of papyrus; 6) the temples were particularly affected; 7) the disaster was caused by a
god greater than the will of the gods. Most Egyptologists believe that this description is
overstated or even fanciful, but it fully agrees with another known as the Admonitions of
Ipuwer. There are also several historical parallels between the Admonitions of Ipuwer and
The Teaching for King Merikare, since the two texts:
Describe a disaster that affected the whole of Egypt and then lavish advice to Pharaoh
in place to restore the country.
Refer to the famous prophecy of Neferty (Admonitions 1:10-11; The Teaching for King
Merikare 68-74), published under Amenemhat I (1975-1946). According to this famous
prophecy, Asiatics who had just entered Egypt would cause her misfortune and would
be expelled after a long time.
Mention the revolt of the District of Thinis (8th Nome of Upper Egypt) resulting in a
severe takeover (Admonitions 3:10; The Teaching for King Merikare 68-74).
The papyrus Leiden 344 containing the Admonitions of Ipuwer was published by
Alan Gardiner272, an eminent Egyptologist and deemed historian, still making authority,
who dated the papyrus itself not earlier than the 19th Dynasty, although there were
sufficiently strong indications that the scribe used a manuscript of which the history of
transmission may go back to the beginning of the 18th Dynasty. According to Enmarch273:
The paleograhy of both recto and verso is broadly Ramessid (...) which can be dated to the late 19th dynasty,
from Merneptah to Siptah [c. 1200 BCE] (...) However, the manuscript contains several older sign forms
that hark back to the Second Intermediate Period and early New Kingdom [c. 1550 BCE]. According
to Gardiner, this text describes dramatic events rather than being a prophecy:
The beginning of the Admonitions reads: The prediction of the ancestors, having reached (1:1011), which is understandable as the fulfilment of a past prophecy, like the one of
Neferty (published around -1950), rather than a prophecy to come.
Many reported details, like: Those who were with the god's boat are yoked [...], and no one has
travelled north to [Byb]los today. What may we do about pines for our mummies, [with] whose products
prie[sts] are buried, (and) with the oil whereof the great are embalmed? From as far as Crete(?) they do
H. GOEDICKE - The Chronology of the Thera/ Santorin Explosion
in: Ägypten und Levante III Wien 1992 p. 61.
272 A.H. GARDINER - The Admonitions of an Egyptian Sage
Leipzig 1909 Ed. J.C. Hinrich'sche Buchhandlung pp. 2-18,110-112.
273 R. ENMARCH – The Dialogue of Ipuwer and the Lord of All
Oxford 2005 Ed. Griffith Institute p. 10.
271
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
not come! Destroyed is gold, finished is the stor[ing up of the s]eed(?) of every work; uncovered is <...>
of the King's Estate (l.p.h.). How great is the coming of oasis-dwellers bearing their festal offerings:
mats, [sleeping mats(?)] of fresh palm, [jar]s?) of birds and plucked(?) reeds(?)! O, yet Elephantine,
Thinis, the Upper Egyptian [nome]s(?), have not paid tax because of [st]rife (3:6-11), would have
no interest in a prophecy and rather correspond to an observation.
On many occasions (10:6-11:12), the author of the text invites the Pharaoh to respond
by destroying enemies and remembering the happy past. These injunctions are only
meaningful if the described disaster had just happened.
Notwithstanding the foregoing common sense, this text is currently filed in the
prophecies274. About the dating, the Egyptologist and philologist Sethe considered that the
best candidate for these events was the end of the Hyksos period, marked by serious
disturbances including, when the Asiatics (‘3mw) were in the Delta. Van Seters275, thanks to
the internal data of the document (social, cultural and political), because the dating by
philology is imprecise, scribes being conservative valued the archaistic style, was able to
date these catastrophic events to the end of the Hyksos era276. For example, section 14:1114 gives an important clue to the date at which the Admonitions was written. One reads:
Every man fights for his sister and he protects his own person. Is it the Nubians (nḥsyw)? Then we shall
make our own protection. Fighting police will hold off the bowmen (pdtyw). Is it the Libyans (tmhw)?
Then we shall act again. The Madjays (md3yw) fortunately are with Egypt. In this passage Egypt is
in conflict with its southern neighbours, the nḥsyw. Here, however, they are viewed as quite
distinct from another Nubian people, the md3yw, who are on the side of Egypt and who are
closely associated by parallelism with the ‘fighting police’. Posener has shown that this
distinction between nḥsyw and md3yw is unknown in the Old Kingdom. In the biography of
Weni from the end of the Old Kingdom the term nḥsyw applies to all the Nubians, both
from w3w3t, the river valley area, as well as from md3, the steppe country. In the course of
the 12th Dynasty, however, the term nḥsyw came to designate only the settled river people,
while Bedouin from the southern steppe were called md3yw. It is in this period also that the
md3yw were regimented as professional soldiers and desert police. The importance of this
distinction becomes apparent at the end of the Hyksos period when the soldiers of
liberation under Kamose include numerous md3yw who remained loyal even though Nubia
was hostile to Egyptian rule and under an independent nḥsy prince. The passage quoted
above, therefore, reflects a situation following the Middle Kingdom and not too different
from that presented to us in the Kamose inscriptions. The history of the development of
this md3yw mercenary force is also substantiated from archaeology by the so-called ‘pan
graves’ in Egypt from the Middle Kingdom period and later. These graves are in character
native to Nubia and have, for good reasons, been associated with the md3yw. Another term
used in the Admonitions, though not strictly ethnic, is pdtyw, which has the general meaning
of ‘foreign bowmen’. It is frequently associated with Asiatics in Middle Kingdom literature,
and this may account for the development of the term sttyw in the sense of ‘archer’ as well
as Asiatic. The term pdtyw is used in The Instructions for Merikare in a description of the
‘3mw, and in The Story of Sinuhe in close association with sttyw. In the Hymn of Sesostris III,
however, the pdtyw seem to include ‘bowmen’ of both Nubia and Asia. While most of the
references in the Admonitions deal with the pdtyw from the north, in the passage of 14:13
quoted above they also refer to hostile Nubians. The period when the pdtyw were
A. FERMAT, M. LAPIDUS – Les prophéties de l'Égypte ancienne
Paris 1999 Éd. La Maison de Vie pp. 5-55,85-195.
275 J. VAN SETERS – A Date for the 'Admonitions' in the Second Intermediate Period
in: The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 50 (1964) Ed. The Egypt Exploration Society pp. 13-23.
276 J. VAN SETERS – The Hyksos a New Investigation
New Haven London 1966 Ed. Yale University Press.
274
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threatening both the northern and southern frontiers was the Second Intermediate Period.
However, the previous conclusions are disputed by Enmarch277. While recognizing some
relevance to the lexical and topographic arguments for setting a date, he prefers to adopt a
hypercritical attitude, inherited from the biblical higher criticism, and leave the dating in a
range going from Senwosret III to the end of the Second Intermediate Period. He
compares the Admonitions of Ipuwer to the “poems” of the Old Testament that contain a
background of historical truth but not allowing to determine the time accurately. However,
Enmarch’s review is biased because it is based on prejudices, for example:
The story of the Admonitions is likened to a poem by Enmarch (without real historical
value) due to the expression: yet the river (Nile) is blood, which would be hyperbolic. This is
arbitrary, if the words were poetic why they mention: no one has travelled north to Byblos
today (...) Elephantine, Thinis, the Upper Egyptian nomes, have not paid tax because of strife (...) the
land of kingship by a few people who are ignorant of counsels. For look, it has come to rebellion against
the strong uraeus of Re’ which pacifies the Two Lands. Look, the secret of the land, whose limits are not
known, is bared; (and so) the Residence has fallen down in an hour (...) the secrets of the Dual Kings
have been bared. Look, the Residence is fearful because of want; (but) my Lord will stir up strife
unopposed! Look, the land has knotted together in gangs (3:6-10; 7:3-7), for example, is poetry?
One can notice that the region in rebellion (from Elephantine to Thinis) is similar to the
area which revolted under Teti the viceroy of Kush and was crushed by Kamose. In
addition, the inability to navigate to Byblos is difficult to explain while it derives logically
from the sacking of the great harbour of Avaris (with 300 ships) by Kamose.
He contradicts himself: Some scholars have also emphasized the essentially ahistorical, timeless,
nature of Middle Egyptian lament literature. This is particularly noticeable in Ipuwer, where concrete
historical or historicizing references are lacking (...) For example, the fact that a lake of wood products
from Byblos, as lamented in Ipuwer 3.6-8, is historically attested in Upper Egypt in the Second
Intermediate Period (...) the assertion that the Medjay are well disposed to Egypt (14.14), and the
possible presentation of Asiatics as a more serious threat to Egypt than Nubians or Libyans, would be
consistent with a late Middle kingdom—Second Intermediate Period dating (...) The viewpoint of the
poem is apparently centred in Memphis/Itjtawy: rebellion is described in Upper Egypt (3.10-11), and
the Delta is overrun (4.5-6). This makes it unlikely that the poem is a Hyksos composition, under
whom Asiatic encroachment on the Delta might not be expected to be lamented. If these description have
any historical significance (sic!), and are not merely schematic ‘inverted world’ laments, it might indicate
that the text was written before the Thirteenth Dynasty [or after the Seventeenth Dynasty] attached to
Upper Egypt, which happened at near or near its end (...) The basic meaning of wšr is ‘dry, parched’;
from the context Faulkner plausibly suggested that here it could mean ‘be barren’ (...) Women’s
barrenness is also an image used of Hyksos distress by Kamose. Consequently, contrary to what
Enmarch claims at the beginning of his commentary, it is particularly noticeable that
there are several concrete historical, or historicizing references, in the Admonitions of
Ipuwer, which allow a dating towards the end of the Second Intermediate Period or
more precisely just after the reign of Kamose.
Although he knows about the reconciliations between the Admonitions and the
Exodus, he just mentions them while pointing to the religion of their authors (Jewish,
Christian and Islamic)278. This explicit reference to religion is exceptional (and abnormal)
in a scholarly article and appears to have been made to discredit implicitly their work (as
one can guess, today, to categorize someone as a religious fundamentalist is an efficient
way to cast doubt about his mental health).
R. ENMARCH – A World Upturned. Commentary on and Analysis of The Dialogue of Ipuwer and the Lord of All
Oxford 2009 Ed. Oxford University Press pp. 1-24,73-74.
278 R. ENMARCH – The reception of a Middle Egyptian poem: The Dialogue of Ipuwer and the Lord of All in the Rammesside period and beyond
in: Ramesside Studies in Honour of K.A. Kitchen (Rutherford Press Bolton, 2011), pp. 169-175.
277
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
According to Enmarch, the Admonitions speak only of the arrival of Asiatics in Egypt,
not their departure. This objection is misleading for the following reasons: the text of
the Admonitions is very incomplete at the end, where the departure of Asiatics may
have been mentioned. As he knows, the Egyptians rewrite history by presenting them as
invaders, because before they left no text mentions any exaction from them. It is not the
departure of Asiatics that shocked Egyptians, but all the disasters (the "10 plagues"
according to the biblical text), which preceded it.
The king of Egypt is not named in the Admonitions, which would be a proof of its
inauthenticity. This criticism is not serious, because many anonymous documents can be
identified by their internal elements. In fact, pharaoh's name is: Neb-er-djer "Lord of
All" (Admonitions 15:13), as Enmarch himself recognized279. It seems that no pharaoh
bore this name, but it must be remembered that Ipuwer, although he had been a high
dignitary, would never have dared to dictate to Pharaoh his conduct. To avoid crimes of
"lese majesty", Egyptian accounts were usually presented timeless to an idealized
Pharaoh. Ahmose is a good candidate for the following reasons: his coronation name:
Neb-pehty-ra "Lord of the power of Re," is close to "Lord of All"; because of his young
age Ahmose's reign was carried out mainly under the regency of his mother (until year
20); that could explain advice given to the future king who came to the end of regency.
As one can see, some arguments are more motivated by prejudice than by facts and
logic. The association of the war of the Hyksos with the biblical Exodus is a hot and
sensitive topic. However, a connection is needed between the Admonitions of Ipuwer, the
Tempest Stele of Ahmose and the biblical Exodus, since these three documents describe
the same disaster on all Egypt. It is amazing that most Egyptologists consider logical that
Apopi (1613-1573), the last great Hyksos king of the 15th dynasty, vanishes suddenly during
the period covered by the 16th Dynasty, then reappears 40 years later to discuss with King
Seqenenre (1544-1533) and to provide him defying letters. In my opinion, the only rational
explanation of that incredible resurgence of Apopi 40 years later is the one offered by the
Bible: it was a miracle.
IS THE TEMPEST STELE A TESTIMONY OF THE ‘TEN PLAGUES’ ?
Most Egyptologists refuse to associate the events described in the Tempest Stela
with those marking the beginning of Exodus for the following reasons:
This disaster would be a "metaphorical storm280", the purpose of which may be esoteric
(for unknown reasons). However, if the purpose of the metaphor was to glorify the
restorative action of Pharaoh, it is because the disaster was real.
This catastrophe would describe the consequences of Santorini's eruption (other
volcanic eruptions have been considered281). However, a detailed analysis negates this
"natural" explanation, at least on two points: 1) the description does not match the
impact of a volcanic eruption282 and 2) the timing between -1645 and -1627 estimated by
dendrochronology283, is incompatible with the reign of Ahmose: One therefore is easily led to
R. ENMARCH – A World Upturned. Commentary on and Analysis of The Dialogue of Ipuwer and the Lord of All.
Oxford 2009 Ed. Oxford University Press pp. 30-31.
280 E. JAMBON – Entre crues et tempêtes. Les Égyptiens face aux caprices de la nature
in: Dossiers d'Archéologie Hors série n°16 (mars 2009) 1 pp. 23-24.
281 M.H. WIENER – Chronology Going Forward (with a Query about 1525/4 B.C.)
in: Timelines Studies in Honour of Manfred Bietak Vol. III (2006) pp. 317-325.
282 M. WIENER, J.P. ALLEN - Separate Lives: The Ahmose Tempest Stela and the Theran Eruption
in: Near Eastern Studies 57 (1998) 1 pp. 1-28.
283 S.W. MANNING - A Test of Time
Oxford 1999 Ed. Oxbow Books pp. 335,336.
M. BIETAK - Science Versus Archaeology C.U. HAMMER - Thera Eruption Date 1645 BC confirmed by New Ice Core Data?
in: The Synchronisation of Civilisations in the Eastern Mediterranean. Wien 2003 pp. 23-31, 87-94.
279
79
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
80
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
conclude, on the basis of the chronology of Crete, a date around 1550-1530 BCE (...) the dating by
C14 and dendrochronology clearly invite one to hold a date one century later. They (dates) first appeared
to converge towards the period 1650-1643, especially because the presence of volcanic ash in Greenland
may arise from Thera, trapped in ice sheets, suggesting an identical date. But the latest and most
relevant dating now tilt the balance towards the years 1625-1600, and despite the remaining
uncertainties, many believe it is time to draw the consequences of this situation284.
The catastrophe described in the Tempest Stele parallels the dramatic episode of
the ‘Ten plagues’ of Egypt on two points: 1) same chronology and 2) same events.
Tempest Stele
[Then] the gods [made] the sky come in a storm of
r[ain, with dark]ness in the western region and the
sky beclouded without [stop, loud]er than [the sound
of] the subjects, strong[er than ..., howling(?)] on the
hills more than the sound of the cavern in
Elephantine. Then every house and every habitation
they reached [perished and those in them died, their
corpses] floating on the water like skiffs of papyrus,
(even) in the doorway and the private apartments (of
the palace), for a period of up to [...] days, while no
torch could give light over the Two Lands.
Then His Incarnation said: How much greater is
this than the impressive manifestation of the great
god, than the plans of the gods!
Then every house and every habitation they reached
[perished and those in them died, their corpses]
floating on the water like skiffs of papyrus, (even) in
the doorway and the private apartments (of the
palace)
Then His Incarnation commanded to make firm the
temples that had fallen to ruin in this entire land: to
make functional the monuments of the gods (...) to
cause the processional images that were fallen to the
ground to enter their shrines.
The "Ten plagues"
Jehovah gave thunders and hail, and fire would run
down to the earth, and Jehovah kept making it rain
down hail upon the land of Egypt. Thus there came
hail, and fire quivering in among the hail (Ex
9:23-24).
Moses stretched his hand out toward the heavens,
and a gloomy darkness began to occur in all the
land of Egypt for 3 days. They did not see one
another, and none of them got up from his own place
3 days; but for all the sons of Israel there proved to
be light in their dwellings (Ex 10:22-23).
Hence the magic-practicing priests said to Pharaoh:
It is the finger of God! (Ex 8:19).
And the Egyptians began to urge the people in order
to send them away quickly out of the land,
“because,” they said: we are all as good as dead!
(Ex 12:33).
I must pass through the land of Egypt on this night
and strike every firstborn in the land of Egypt, from
man to beast; and on all the gods of Egypt I shall
execute judgments (god statues thrown down,
according to 1Samuel 5:3) (Ex 12:12).
Without the biblical explanation the ‘tempest of Ahmose’ remains an enigma. The
Admonitions of Ipuwer describe the same situation:
Admonitions of Ipuwer
The "Ten plagues"
[Nile] River is blood
Admonitions 2:6,10: pestilence is throughout the Exodus 7:20-21: all the water that was in the
land, blood is everywhere (...) O, yet the [Nile] river [Nile] River was turned into blood. And the fish
is blood and one drinks from it; one pushes people that were in the [Nile] River died, and the [Nile]
aside, thirsting for water.
River began to stink; and the Egyptians were
unable to drink water from the [Nile] River.
Hail and fire
Admonitions 2:10-11; 7:1: 0, yet porches, Exodus 9:23-24: Jehovah gave thunders and hail,
pillarsand partition walls(?) are burnt, (but) the and fire would run down to the earth, and Jehovah
R. TREUIL, P. DARCQUE, J.-C. POURSAT, G. TOUCHAIS -Les Civilisations égéennes du Néolithique et de l'Âge du Bronze
Paris 2008 Éd. Presses universitaires de France p. 296.
284
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
facade(?) of the King's Estate (l.p.h.) is enduring kept making it rain down hail upon the land of
and firm (...) For look, the fire is become higher.
Egypt. Thus there came hail, and fire quivering in
among the hail.
Magic is ineffective
Admonitions 6:6-7: O, yet the sacred forehall, its Exodus 8:18-19: the magic-practicing priests tried
writings have been removed; the place of secrets and to do the same by their secret arts, in order to bring
the sanctuary(?) have been stripped bare. O, yet forth gnats, but they were unable (...) the magicmagic is stripped bare; omens(?) and predictions(?) practicing priests said to Pharaoh: It is the finger of
are made dangerous because of their being recalled by God!
people.
Vegetation perished
Admonitions 4:14; 6:2-4: O, yet [t]rees are Exodus 9:25; 10:15: The hail struck everything
swept away, plantations laid bare (...) O, yet one that was in the field, from man to beast, and all
eats(?) plants and one drinks down water. No meal sorts of vegetation of the field; and it shattered all
or bird-plants can be found; seed is taken from the sorts of trees of the field (...) [the locusts] went on
pig's mouth. There is no bright face because of eating up all the vegetation of the land and all the
*bowing down(?) before hunger. O, yet barley has fruit of the trees that the hail had left; and there was
perished everywhere (...) everyone says. ‘There is left nothing green on the trees or on the vegetation of
nothing!’ — the storehouse is razed.
the field in all the land of Egypt.
Cattle perished
Admonitions 5:6: O, yet all herds, their hearts Exodus 9:3: Jehovah’s hand is coming upon your
weep; cattle mourn because of the state of the land. livestock that is in the field. On the horses, the
asses, the camels, the herd and the flock there will be
a very heavy pestilence.
Disaster on the whole country
Admonitions 5:6; 6:4; 9:6; 10:4: Officials are Exodus 12:30,33: There began arising a great
hungry and homeless (...) everyone says: There is outcry among the Egyptians, because there was not a
nothing! The storehouse is razed (...) Look, the house where there was not one dead (...) and the
strong of the land, they have note reported the state Egyptians began to urge the people in order to send
of the subjects, having come to ruin (...) The entire them away quickly out of the land, because, they
King’s Estate is without its revenues.
said, we are all as good as dead.
Darkness
Admonitions 9:11,14; 10:1: Wretches [...] Exodus 10:22-23: A gloomy darkness began to
them(?); day does not dawn on it. Destroyed (...) occur in all the land of Egypt for 3 days. They did
be]hind a wall(?) in an office, and rooms containing not see one another, and none of them got up from
falcons and rams(?) [... till] dawn. It is the his own place 3 days; but for all the sons of Israel
commoner who will be vigilant; day dawns on him. there proved to be light in their dwellings.
Death of the firstborn
Admonitions 2:6-7; 3:13-14; 5:6-7: there is no Exodus 12:29-30: who was in the prison And it
*lack(?) of death; the (mummy)-binding speaks came about that at midnight Jehovah struck every
without approaching it. O, yet the many dead are firstborn in the land of Egypt, from the firstborn of
buried in the river; the flood is a grave, while the Pharaoh sitting on his throne to the firstborn of the
tomb has become a flood (...) What may we do captive hole, and every firstborn of beast. Then
about it, since it has come to perishing? O, yet Pharaoh got up at night, he and all his servants and
laughter has perished [and is no] longer done. It is all [other] Egyptians; and there began arising a
mourning which is throughout the land mixed with great outcry among the Egyptians, because there was
lamentation (...) O, yet the children of officials are not a house where there was not one dead.
thrown against walls; children of prayer are placed
on high ground. Khnum mourns because of his
weariness. O, yet terror slays.
81
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
82
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
Pharaoh is fallen down
Admonitions 7:4: the Residence has fallen down Psalms 136:15: And who shook off Pharaoh and
in an hour.
his military force into the Red Sea.
Egyptians stripped
Admonitions 2:4-5; 3:1-3: O, yet the poor have Exodus 11:2; 12:35-36: Speak, now, in the ears
become the owners of riches; he who could not make of the people, that they should ask every man of his
for himself sandals is the owner of wealth (...) the companion and every woman of her companion
outside bow-people have come to Egypt. O, yet articles of silver and articles of gold (...) the sons of
[‘3mw Asiatics] reach [Egypt] and there are no Israel did according to the word of Moses in that
people anywhere. O, yet gold, lapis lazuli, silver, they went asking from the Egyptians articles of
turquoise, garnet, amethyst, diorite(?), our [fine silver and articles of gold and mantles. And Jehovah
stones(?),] have been hung on the neck(s) of gave the people favour in the eyes of the Egyptians,
maidservants; riches are throughout the land, (but) so that these granted them what was asked [in order
ladies of the house say: ‘Would that we had to get some food?]; and they stripped the Egyptians.
something we might eat!’
The beginning of the Astarte papyrus (dated 1415 BCE), which is very lacunary,
relates a amazing struggle called ‘The gods against the sea285’, it reads: Year 5, III Peret 19,
may he live King of Upper and Lower Egypt [Amenhotep II ...] he has done for the Ennead in order to
combat the sea [... I want to celebrate] your exploits, exalting [your power] telling what you did whereas I
was just a child [...] the rebels were made [... two mountains] to trample your enemies [...] as they trampled
reeds [...] his head while his [two horns ...]286 his enemies and opponents. Regard to [...] and the earth
calmed down [...] So every man embraced [his neighbour ...] after [seven] days and the sky [...] the tribute
of the sea [...] the sea as sovereign [...] the sky. Come near them to [the moment ... Asiatics] Astarte [...]
the daughter of Ptah [... come] fight with him [...] he calmed down. He will not seek a quarrel. Seth sat
down [...] and the sea gave up [...] with the sky [...]. That story is not clear, but it seems linked to
the fall of Avaris.
The dramatic events related to the departure of the Hebrews to Palestine left a trace
in Egyptian documents. A disaster of such a magnitude has logically marked the national
memory. The translation of the Jewish Bible into Greek, the Septuagint (280 BCE),
welcomed by Ptolemy II Philadelphus, however provoked a hostile reaction of the
Egyptian priests, as the story of the Exodus, now available to Greek speaking Egyptians,
gave a poor image of the ancient Egyptian priesthood. Manetho, a Hellenized Egyptian
priest, at the request of Ptolemy II Philadelphus, wrote in Greek from Egyptian sources a
history of Egypt under the title Aegyptiaca. In this story, the story of the Hyksos reappears
but overhauled since this time they are described as being cruel princes, burning and
slaughtering, oppressing Egypt and finally expelled because of their leprosy. It is in such a
controversial context that the ancient history of the Hyksos resurfaced, which explains the
distorted view that several Egyptian inscriptions give of this period (erected in the area
around Avaris, another notable coincidence).
The first inscription was found in El-Arish287, and as noted by Griffith288, this long
text refers to the ancient sanctuary of Pi-Soped (which was the capital of the 20th nome
during the Ptolemaic period) and described in mythological terms the successive reigns of
the gods Ra, Tefnut, Geb and Chou (description influenced by Greek conception of the
four elements, Fire being associated with Ra, Tefnut with Water, Geb with the Earth and
P. COLLOMBERT, L. COULON - Les dieux contre la mer
in: Bulletin de l'Institut Français d'Archéologie Orientale 100 (2000) p.207.
286 The head with two horns is the symbol of Baal.
287 The naos 2248 of Ismailia's Museum.
288 F.L. GRIFFITH -The Antiquities of Tell el Yahûdîyeh and Miscellaneous Work in Lower Egypt during the Years 1887-1888
London 1890 Ed. Egypt Exploration Fund pp. 70-74.
285
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
Chou with the Air). Despite this theological aspect289, Goyon290, the author of a complete
translation of this text, has rightly noted: The story of the attack is based on the memories of
invasions from the east and, in particular, the Hyksos invasion. The inhabitants of pi-Soped (prSpdw) were aware of being the bulwark of Egypt, or the other major city of the 20th nome
was Gesem291 (gsm is vocalized gosem in Coptic and gošen in Hebrew) which appears in the
"Land of Gesem" of the Septuagint. The word gasmou, from which gesem is derived has the
meaning "storm" in Egyptian292 (the word gšm has the same meaning in Ugaritic and
Hebrew). The terms "land of Goshen", "land of Rameses" and "Field of Tanis" mean
essentially the same region (Gn 45:10; 47:11, Ps 78:12,43), or the land of the "Storm"
belonging to the" Son of the Sun (Pharaoh)" in the "marshlands of Tanis293."
According to the Pithom stele294, found in the same region (Tell Maskhuta) and
dated the year 22 of Ptolemy II Philadelphus [in 263 BCE], one reads295: The king went to the
province of Syria. When he reached Palestine, he found all the gods of Egypt and brought them back to
Egypt (...) Egypt is in his fist and all foreign countries are under his soles (...) she [her Majesty] realized a
large wall in the middle of the eastern desert, of a wonderful length, impassable to repel enemies —
misfortune from the gods — when they entered Egypt.
Due to their location, one can understand that the Egyptian priests in this region
had maintained a bad memory of the Hyksos, the ancestors of the Jews from the time of
Ptolemy II Philadelphus. Although the inscription of the naos in Pi-Soped [the Yat-Nebes
of decans296, the present Saft al-Henna) is very damaged, however one can read:
Empedocles of Agrigento (495-435?) stated, for example: At one point, the One formed from the Multiple, at another time, it was divided and from
the One left the Multiple - Fire, Water and Earth and the powerful height of the Air.
290 G. GOYON - Travaux de Chou et les tribulations de Geb d'après le naos 2248 d'Ismaïlia
in: Kêmi tome 6 (1936) pp. 1-42.
291 M. DESSOUDEIX – Chronique de l'Égypte ancienne
Paris 2008 Éd. Actes Sud pp. 761,769-771.
292 J.E. HOCH – Semitic Words in Egyptian Texts of the New Kingdom and Third Intermediate Period
Princeton 1994 Ed. Princeton University Press p.354.
293 D. VALBELLE – Tanis
in: Dictionnaire de l'Antiquité sous la direction de Jean Leclant 2005 Éd. PUF p. 2123.
294 E. NAVILLE – The Store-City of Pithom and the Route of Exodus
London 1903 Ed. Egypt Exploration Fund pp. 1-40.
295 C. THIERS – Ptolémée Philadelphe et les prêtres d'Atoum de Tjékou. Nouvelle édition de la « stèle de Pithom »
in: Orientalia monspeliensa 17 (2007) pp. 39-40, 45-49, 52-55.
296 A.S. VON BOMHARD –The Egyptian Calendar
in: Egyptology in the Dawn of the Twenty-first Century Vol. 2 (2003) p. 142.
289
83
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84
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
[But then] the majesty of Chu was the perfect king of heaven, earth, hell, water, wind, primordial
waters, mountains and sea, [making] all laws on the throne of his father Ra-Harakhte became just of
voice. But then the majesty of Chu was in his home [...] in Memphis. His Majesty spoke to the great
Ennead of the gods which was to follow him: Let's walk to [...] in the east, to my residence of Yat-Nebes
(...) Thus the majesty of Chu rose Yat-Nebes solid like the sky and all her castles as akhit. He came [...]
as King of the Gods in Yat-Nebes. He completed the throne of Harakhte. But then children of Apopis, the
rebels who are in the "dry place" and in the desert, they came by paths of Yat-Nebes, swooping down on
Egypt in the dusk [...] of Egypt. They conquered but to destroy. They ransacked every place on the water,
on land, they became [abandoned]? [...] by all the inhabitants because of this. These rebels, so they came
from the East Mountains on all Yat-Nebes paths. Behold the majesty of Chu placed the gods following Ra
and gods following [Chu] on all hillocks are in the territory of Yat-Nebes. It was hillocks of the time of Ra,
the time when the Majesty of Ra was in Yat-Nebes [...] This is the great walls of Egypt repelling rebels
wnen Apopis proceeds to attack (?) Egypt. The gods of these hillocks are the bulwark of this earth, they are
the four pillars of heaven, the guard (?) [...] of eternal horizon, the throne of Chu in Yat-Nebes. Those who
reside in the hillocks of Yat-Nebes, they are batters of the earth [...] store. They are Souls of the East to
[...] of Ra Harakhte. They are the supporters of Ra in heaven and in the other world [...] of sky. They are
the masters of the eastern mountain, defending Ra against Apopis, knowing all [...] in the territory of YatNebes, with the gods who live in Yat-Desui in Yat-Nebesn it is the lake [...] east to Yat-Nebes, who left
his Majesty of Ra, to fight against Apopis' fellow [...] in Yat-Nebes, east of Yat-Nebes, it is the lake [...]
in Yat-Nebes (...) with Chu? taking for him the whole earth. No one was resisting his presence. No other
god was in the mouth of his troops [...] furious face with imperious look. He had his flag with the assistance
of the wicked ones. Evil fell on this earth. There was a great revolution in the residence. Rebels carried
disorder to the residents of the house of Chu. Here that Geb saw his mother who loved him very much. His
heart (Geb's) was negligent after her. Earth [...] for his in great affliction. The Majesty of Chu flew to
heaven with her companions. Tefnut remained in the place of her coronation in Memphis. She went to the
royal house of Chu to noon. The great Ennead of gods stood on the world (?) of eternity that is the path of
her father Harakhte. So the majesty of [...] Here he finds him in this place called Pi-Kharoti [p-ḫ3-3-r-t-ÿ]
and here he took him by force. It was a great revolution in he residence. It was Chu rising to heaven. There
was no way out of the palace for a period of 9 days, and during these 9 days of revolution it was a storm as
neither men nor gods saw the face of their neighbour. The Majesty of Geb appeared crowned on the throne of
his father Chu, and all the inhabitants of the residence kissed the ground before him. After 75 days Geb
went into the Delta and Chu flew to heaven, above the ground, in front of his eldest son through the
mountains [of the East]. He did not go to On [Heliopolis] with as companions of thieves of scepter, called
the "hidden ones", who lived on what the gods abominate (...) When the Majesty of Ra-Harakhte fighting
with the enemies in this water of Yat-Desui — rebels showed no courage against His Majesty — His
Majesty made contact with Yat-Desui, he took the form of a crocodile (...) As His Majesty was at home in
Ity-Tawi in the land of henu plants. His Majesty had sent an expedition to bring her foreigners and
Asiatics (‘3mw) from their lands. Then the Majesty of Geb says to the great Ennead of the gods who were
behind her: What did my father Chu from the beginning of his reign on the throne of his father Atum? The
Ennead said to the Majesty of Geb. Since your father Chu was on the throne of his father Atum, he
defeated all the rebels of his father Atum by killing children of Apopis and he made all the enemies of his
father Ra see reason and after the air has got cooler, the lands were dried, the gods and humans were formed
the following of Atum lord of southern On [Heliopolis], he irrigated cities, founding nomes, and pitched the
walls of Egypt, building temples in the land of the South and North.
Several clues make it possible to locate the time of the disaster during the reigns of
Kamose or Seqenenre. Indeed, Ity-Tawi297 was the residence of Pharaohs of the 12th
dynasty (the capital of the 18th dynasty was in Thebes) and building activity at Karnak [the
On or southern Heliopolis], described at the end, only picked up again from Ahmose298,
Capital near Lisht (necropolis of the first two kings of the 12th Dynasty).
L. GABOLDE – Thèbes
in: Dictionnaire de l'Antiquité sous la direction de Jean Leclant (2005 Éd. PUF), p. 2168.
297
298
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
the first Pharaoh of the 18th Dynasty. The Pharaoh of the story is designated by the term
"Majesty of Ra (or Chu)" and his opponent is portrayed as the dragon Apopis.
Coincidence: the name Seqenenre means "He who Ra made brave" and the name of the
king Apopi (written i-p-p) is close to that of the evil god Apopis (written ‘-p-p) associated
with Seth. Although the story is mythological, the protagonists stand well: on one side the
pharaoh and the gods of Egypt, on the other rebels from the mountains of the East
assimilated to foreigners and to Asiatics, portrayed as enemies, villains, companions or
children of Apopis and thieves of sceptre that the gods abominate. The outline of the
conflict overlaps with that of the biblical text:
Egyptian account (naos 2248)
Biblical account
Residence in Memphis
The majesty of Chu was in his home [...] in Pharaoh had to stay near Ramses (Ex 12:31-37)
Memphis.
which was Fostat, near Memphis, according to
Flavius Josephus (Jewish Antiquities II:315).
Beginning of disaster
Swooping down on Egypt in the dusk [...] Earth Death of firstborn began at midnight and there was
[...] for his in great affliction [...] There was a great a great outcry among the Egyptians (Ex 12:2930).
revolution in the residence.
Death of firstborn
Chu flew to heaven, above the ground, in front of his The firstborn of Pharaoh died prior his father (Ex
eldest son (who therefore died prior his father).
11:5).
Death of Pharaoh
The Majesty of Ra-Harakhte fighting with the Death of Pharaoh at Pi-Haḥirot299 (Ex 14:9)
enemies in this water of Yat-Desui [...] Here he shook off in the Red Sea (Ps 136:15) when he was
finds him in this place called Pi-Ḫaroti ( fighting with the Israelites (Ex 14:23).
roti (
)) and here he took him by force.
outh of Heiroth"
Great darkness
During these 9 days of revolution it was a storm as A gloomy darkness began to occur in all the land of
neither men nor gods saw the face of their neighbour. Egypt for 3 days. They did not see one another, and
none of them got up from his own place 3 days (Ex
10:21-23).
Pharaoh is a crocodile
His Majesty made contact with Yat-Desui, he took Pharaoh, king of Egypt, the great sea monster lying
the form of a crocodile.
stretched out in the midst of his Nile canals (...) I
will put hooks in your jaws (Ezk 29:3-4).
Most Egyptologists claim that these Egyptian testimonies are only some vague
allegories of past disasters but, if it was the case, what was the goal of such allegories?
Furthermore, Manetho (c. 280 BCE) who was an Egyptian historian and priest, and not a
poet, would have invented his story about some ancient Jewish lepers who were able to
fight with Pharaoh's armies, but for what purpose? In addition if his narrative had not a
true basis it would be strange, because in the past Pharaoh had always been viewed as an
invincible god. At last, why would Hecataeus of Abdera (315-305 BCE) who was a Greek
historian and sceptic philosopher have believed such an unbelievable story? Why had King
Ptolemy alluded (in 196 BCE) to this disaster of the past if it was just a myth: he [King
Ptolemy] overcame the rebels who were within it, and slaughtered them in accordance with what Thoth and
Horus son of Isis did to those who had rebelled against them in those places in the Beginning; (as for) the
rebels who had gathered armies and led them to disturb the nomes, harming the temples and abandoning the
299
Pi-Haḥirot is transcribed [pi]-Heiroth “mouth of Heiroth” in the Septuagint (Nb 33:7-8).
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way of the King and his father, the gods let him overcome thein at Memphis during the festival of the
Reception of the Rulership which he did from his father (Rosetta Stone lines 26-28). In my opinion,
the core of the Egyptian testimonies about the Hyksos' war are broadly true, but were
embellished or arranged because of nationalism (as we can understand a complete
discomfiture is impossible for nationalists!), which is a usual behaviour as had already
explained the famous historian Thucydides.
Some 30 ancient Egyptian texts with Exodus “parallels” or Exodus-like content
have been identified by 56 Egyptologists, archaeologists, and Semiticists from 1844 to now
in professional literature and additional texts have now been identified (in 2013) for a total
of more than 90 Egyptian texts containing Exodus parallels. Based on the work presented
at the UCSD Exodus conference300, Jan Assmann has ventured beyond his pioneering
concept of cultural “mnemohistories” to comment that consensus views of the Exodus are
“now highly contested” because there has been “Perhaps too much unanimity as to the
non-historicity of the Exodus”; the “old certainties” of Exodus as pure myth are “gone”.
The enigmatic scene301 below appears in the royal Amduat underworld book, dated
around 1500 BCE302, as it is visualized (10th Hour) in Amenhotep II's tomb (KV 35). In the
first stage there are 12 soldiers (in 3 groups of 4), in the second stage we can see Horus (the
god of Egypt) in the middle, between the gods of Upper and Lower Egypt, which are
themselves between two walls of vertical water and finally, in the third stage the 12 soldiers
are all drowned and are represented inside the missing "path of water" of the second stage.
B.C. SPARKS – Egyptian Texts relating to the Exodus: Discussions of Exodus Parallels in the Egyptology Literature
in: Israel’s Exodus in Transdisciplinary Perspective (Springer, 2013), pp. 259-281.
301 Z. HAWASS – Les trésors de la vallée des rois
Pais 2006, Ed. Place des victoires, pp. 103-114,120-135,166-167.
302 The earliest citation of the Amduat appears in the tomb of Tuthmosis I (KV 20).
300
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
The Egyptian texts that accompany these images are not very explicit. For example,
the walls of Water in a split Sea, the water bandage is called "Lake of Fire", also appears in
the scene of Hour 5 (below) in the Amduat book (Thutmose III tomb KV 34) and the
Hieroglyphic text caption between walls states that water had once been present and would
return in deadly fashion in the same waterway or body of water 5 hours later. The second
image is the Amduat-parallel scene in the Book of Gates, Hour 4, with Hour Goddesses
standing upright on top of the walls of divided waters, showing that the Walls of Water in
the corresponding Amduat Hour 5 scene are vertical and not an overhead image or a map
of pools or lakes. The Coiled serpent represents Apophis, an enemy entity, which is
clouding the view, not a picture of blessed dead. Anyway, the only naval battle in which the
Egyptian army was involved took place at Avaris in the reign of Kamose (1533-1530).
The Book of Gates, which is an Ancient Egyptian funerary text dating from the
New Kingdom303, narrates the passage of a newly deceased soul into the next world304. The
scene of Hour 9 (below) in Ramses VI’s tomb (KV 9) shows that among the 12 dead ones
in the basin of drowned (bottom) only 9 souls were resurrected (top of the picture)!
The earliest citation of the Book of Gates appears in the tomb of Horemheb (1323-1295).
Which corresponds to the journey of the sun through the underworld during the 12 hours of the night. The soul is required to pass
through a series of 'gates' at different stages in the journey. Each gate is associated with a different goddess, and requires that the
deceased recognise the particular character of that deity. The text implies that some people will pass through unharmed, but that others
will suffer torment in a lake of fire.
303
304
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WHO WAS APOPI?
Apopi was a genuine pharaoh, since he exceptionally got a full titulary. Indeed, no
Hyksos king, except he, received Horus' name and Pharaoh's title (in official documents).
Name of:
1
sḥtp t3wy
1
2
3
1
Horus
Seheteptauy
Enthronement
nb ḫpš r‘
Nebhepeshre
‘3 qn r‘
Aaqenre
‘3 wsr r‘
Aauserre
Birth
ippi
Apopi
Egyptian meaning
He-satisfies-the-Two-Lands
Lord-of-the-strength-of-Sun
Great-and-brave-is-Sun
Large-is-the-power-of-Sun
-
The first enthronement name of Apopi (Nebhepeshre) appears on a dagger found in
the tomb of an Asiatic named Abdu305 "Servant of Him (in Hebrew)", with the following
inscription on the handle306: The good god, lord of the Two Lands, Nebhepeshre, son of Sun, Apopi,
given life. His lord's retainer, Naḥam [in Delta]307. This dignitary was a Hyksos because he has
two crossed bands (in dotted) and a necklace on his chest, in addition, he holds a scimitar
in his left hand (a weapon typically Asiatic) and he bore a Hebrew name: Naham308.
The terms ‘king's son’, ‘son of Sun’ and ‘god's wife’, do not refer to biological
relationships but to official titles of royalty. The title ‘god's wife’ was understood as ‘king's
wife’. In the same way ‘son of Sun’ was understood as "by divine right" and ‘king's son’ as
‘royal son’ or "belonging to the royal family". The official title ‘King of Upper and Lower
P. LACAU – Catalogue général des antiquités égyptiennes du musée du Caire n° 28087-28126
Le Caire Ed. Institut Français d'Archéologie Orientale pp.86,86.
306 G. DARESSY – Un poignard du temps des rois pasteurs
in: Annales du service des antiquités de l'Égypte tome VII (1906) pp. 115-120.
307 The clump of papyrus at the end of the name is an ideogram for the "Land of the North (Delta)".
308 1Ch 4:18,19. The text also specifies that a named Mered had married Bityah a Pharaoh's daughter.
305
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
Egypt’ written n(y)-sw(t)-bity means "He who belongs to the reed and the Bee" in which the
reed (swt) symbolizes Upper Egypt and the bee (bity) Lower Egypt309.
The second enthronement name of Apopi (Aaqenre) appears on an offering table
found in Tanis310. One can note that the representations of Seth, the god worshiped by
Pharaoh Apopi have been systematically hammered:
Horus: pacifier-of-the-Two-Lands, the Perfect God, Aqenenre, may he live! (This is) what he made as
his monument for his father Seth, lord of Avaris, affixing his flag-staves, that lie might make 'given-life'
like Re forever. Horus: pacifier-of-the-Two-Lands, the Perfect God, Aqenenre, may he live. (This is) what
he made as his monument for his father, Seth lord of Avaris, when he placed all lands under his feet.
The phraseology is typically Egyptian, Seth being presented as the father of King
Apopi. Another inscription on a building in Avaris says311: Horus: pacifier-[of-the-Two-Lands
...], Son of Re, Apopi, given life. [He made it as his monument for his father Seth, making] for him many
flag-staves and a fixture (?) of bronze for this god. The titular of Apopi is somewhat unusual,
because the god Seth is placed in an honorary ante-position at the beginning of the
sentence (not the word), which is exceptional, as one can see below (on a granite vessel):
Seth,The Perfect God, Aqenenre, Son of Re, Apopi, given life, beloved of [-]
Apopi is the only Hyksos to have been designated by the title King of
Upper and Lower Egypt (nsw bity), probably from a young age because several
seals (at least 7) bear the title "royal son (s3 nsw)", which suggests that he was
designated to the throne312.
The Perfect (sic) King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Apopi, given life
J. VERCOUTER – L'Egypte et la vallée du Nil Tome 1
Paris 1992 Éd. Presses universitaires de France p. 206.
310 L. HABACHI – The Second Stela of Kamose and his Struggle against the Hyksos Ruler and his Capital
Glückstadt 1972 Ed. Verlag J.J. Augustin pp.56-65.
311 D.B. REDFORD - The Hyksos: New Historical and Archaeological Perspectives
Philadelphia 1997 Ed. The University Museum E.D. Oren p. 7 N° 33,35.
312 K.S.B. RYHOLT - The Political Situation in Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period
Copenhagen 1997 Ed. The Carsten Niebuhr Intitute of Near Eastern Studies pp. 45-48, 54-57, 129, 258.
309
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The third enthronement name of Apopi (Aauserre), the most frequent, appears:
1) without cartouche:
King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Aauserre, Son of Re, Apopi, given life, Lord of the Two Lands
2) without cartouche in the scribal text313 (Medinet el-Fayum), but with cartouche in the
dedication: Palette made by the king, the scribe of Re, whom Thoth himself taught, who expectore the
Ombian Seth and its followers to/of all things; multitalented on the day when he reads faithfully all the
difficult (passages) of the writings as (smoothly as [?]) flows the Nile [...] with a great [..., unique(?) ...],
stout-hearted on the day of battle, with a greater reputation than any (other) king, protector of strange lands
who have never (even) had a glimpse of him; living image of Re upon earth, solving(?) [...] people. King of
Upper and Lower Egypt, Aauserre, Son of Re, Apopi, given life every day like Re forever. I was [...] to(?)
his teaching, he is a judge(?) of the needy(?) commons — there is no false statement in that — there is
indeed not his like in any land! [...] Son of Re, of his body, whom he loves, Apopi, given life. // Palette
given by the king to the scribe Atju. Several phrases of this text are strange, such as: he reads
faithfully all the difficult (passages) of the writings (...) his teaching, he is a judge of the needy commons —
there is no false statement in that — there is indeed not his like in any land!
On a alabaster vessel from Spain (Almuñecar), in a rectangle: The Perfect God, Aauserre,
Son of Re, Apopi; Royal sister T(?)awa, may she live, and around the rim: King of Upper and Lower
Egypt, Aauserre, Son of Re, Apopi; Royal sister T(?)awa; may she live. The Perfect God, Lord of the
Two Lands, whose might has reached the limits of the foreign lands — there is not a country exempt from
serving him!
3) with cartouche: in the date of Rhind Papyrus: Regnal year 33, III Akhet [day 1 under the
majesty of] the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Aauserre, given life.
Apopi's name was widespread since it was found, for example, in the
tomb of Amenhotep I, on an alabaster vase dedicated in his name and on
behalf of Herit (ḥ-r-i-t?), a king's daughter314. This dedication (opposite figure)
also proves that Apopi, pharaoh of Lower Egypt, was on good terms with
the Pharaoh of Upper Egypt: Sister of the King of Upper Egypt, Herit, may she live,
the Perfect God, Aauserre, Son of Re, Apopi, given life. A high official re-dedicated a sphinx315
representing Sesostris III: Apopi beloved by Wadjet, Lady of Imet; the treasurer Ikhuir [=Aḫuel?].
The most incomprehensible among all these inscriptions on Apopi is the systematic
hammering of god Seth (in Avaris). The Egyptians indeed hammered only the Seth of
Apopi after his departure, but not the ancient god Seth. This fact is unique in their history
because there were two Seth at Avaris, worshiped and cursed at the same time316! The most
plausible explanation is to assume there was a violent conflict, just before the war of the
Hyksos, between the "Master (Seth/Baal)" of Apopi and the other Egyptian gods.
Numerous Greek and Latin authors spoke of Jews in Egypt317. Among those whose
works have been preserved there is:
H. GOEDICKE – The Scribal Palette of Athu (Berlin Inv. Nr. 7798)
in: Chronique d'Égypte LXIII (1988) Fasc. 125 pp. 42-56.
W. HELCK – Historisch-Bibliographische Texte der 2. Zwischenzeit und Neue Texte der 18. Dynastie
Wiesbaden 1975 Ed. Otto Harrassowitz pp.54-58.
314 W.C. HAYES – The Scepter of Egypt Part II
Massachusetts 1959 Ed. Harvard Universit Press.
315 D. ARNOLD – Image and Identity: Egypt's Eastern Neighbours, East Delta People and the Hyksos
in: The Second Intermediate Period (Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 192, 2010) p. 208, plates 33-34.
316 H. SOUROUZIAN – Seth fils de Nout et Seth d'Avaris dans la statuaire royale ramesside
in: Timelines Studies in Honour of Manfred Bietak Vol. I (2006) pp. 331-354.
317 M. STERN - Greek and Latin Authors on Jews and Judaism
Jerusalem 1976 Ed. Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities pp. 26-34.
313
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
Hecataeus of Abdera (315-305 BCE), a Greek historian and sceptic philosopher: When
in ancient times a pestilence arose in Egypt, the common people ascribed their troubles to the workings of
a divine agency; for indeed with many strangers of all sorts dwelling in their midst and practising
different rites of religion and sacrifice, their own traditional observances in honour of the gods had fallen
into disuse. Hence the natives of the land surmised that unless they removed the foreigners, their troubles
would never be resolved. At once, therefore, the aliens were driven from the country, and the most
outstanding and active among them banded together and, as some say, were cast ashore in Greece and
certain other regions; their leaders were notable men, chief among them being Danaus and Cadmus. But
the greater number were driven into what is now called Judaea, which is not far distant from Egypt and
was at that time utterly uninhabited. The colony was headed by a man called Moses, outstanding both
for his wisdom and for his courage. On taking possession of the land he founded, besides other cities, one
that is now the most renowned of all, called Jerusalem. In addition he established the temple that they
hold in chief veneration, instituted their forms of worship and ritual, drew up their laws and ordered
their political institutions. He also divided them into twelve tribes, since this is regarded as the most
perfect number and corresponds to the number of months that make up a year. But be had no images
whatsoever of the gods made for them, being of the opinion that God is not in human form; rather the
Heaven that surrounds the earth is alone divine, and rules the universe. The sacrifices that he established
differ from those of other nations, as does their way of living, for as a result of their own expulsion from
Egypt he introduced an unsocial and intolerant mode of life. He picked out the men of most refinement
and with the greatest ability to head the entire nation, and appointed them priests; and he ordained that
they should occupy themselves with the temple and the honours and sacrifices offered to their God. These
same men he appointed to be judges in all major disputes, and entrusted to them the guardianship of the
laws and customs. For this reason the Jews never have a king, and authority over the people is regularly
vested in whichever priest is regarded as superior to his colleagues in wisdom and virtue. They call this
man the high priest, and believe that he acts as a messenger to them of God's commandments. It is he,
we are told, who in their assemblies and other gatherings announces what is ordained, and the Jews are
so docile in such matters that straightway they fall to the ground and do reverence to the high priest when
he expounds the commandments to them. And at the end of their laws there is even appended the
statement: "These are the words that Moses heard from God and declares unto the Jews." Their
lawgiver was careful also to make provision for warfare, and required the young men to cultivate
manliness, steadfast-ness, and, generally, the endurance of every hardship. He led out military
expeditions against the neighbouring tribes, and after annexing much land apportioned it out, assigning
equal allotments to private citizens and greater ones to the priests, in order that they, by virtue of
receiving more ample revenues, might be undistracted and apply themselves continually to the worship of
God. The common citizens were forbidden to sell their individual plots, lest there be some who for their
own advantage should buy them up, and by oppressing the poorer classes bring on a scarcity of
manpower. He required those who dwelt in the land to rear their children, and since offspring could be
cared for at little cost, the Jews were from the start a populous nation. As to marriage and the burial of
the dead, he saw to it that their customs should differ widely from those of other men. But later, when
they became subject to foreign rule, as a result of their mingling with men of other nations (both under
Persian rule and under that of the Macedonians who overthrew the Persians), many of their traditional
practices were disturbed.
Manetho (c. 280 BCE), an Egyptian historian and priest: There was a king of ours whose
name was Tutimaeus. Under him it came to pass, I know not how, that God was averse to us, and
there came, after a surprising manner, men of ignoble birth out of the eastern parts, and had boldness
enough to make an expedition into our country, and with ease subdued it by force, yet without our
hazarding a battle with them. So when they had gotten those that governed us under their power, they
afterwards burnt down our cities, and demolished the temples of the gods, and used all the inhabitants
after a most barbarous manner; nay, some they slew, and led their children and their wives into slavery.
At length they made one of themselves king, whose name was Salatis; he also lived at Memphis, and
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made both the upper and lower regions pay tribute, and left garrisons in places that were the most proper
for them. He chiefly aimed to secure the eastern parts, as fore-seeing that the Assyrians, who had then
the greatest power, would be desirous of that kingdom, and invade them; and as he found in the Saïte
Nomos, [Sethroite,] a city very proper for this purpose, and which lay upon the Bubastic channel, but
with regard to a certain theological notion was called Avaris, this he rebuilt, and made very strong by the
walls he built about it, and by a most numerous garrison of 240,000 armed men whom he put into it to
keep it. Thither Salatis came in summer time, partly to gather his corn, and pay his soldiers their wages,
and partly to exercise his armed men, and thereby to terrify foreigners. When this man had reigned 19
years, after him reigned another, whose name was Bnon, for 44 years; after him reigned another, called
Apachnas, 36 years and 7 months; after him Apophis reigned 61 years, and then Jannas 50 years and
1 month; after all these reigned Assis 49 years and 2 months. And these 6 were the first rulers among
them, who were all along making war with the Egyptians, and were very desirous gradually to destroy
them to the very roots. This whole nation was styled Hyksos, that is, Shepherd-kings: for the first
syllable Hyk, according to the sacred dialect, denotes a king, as is sos a shepherd; but this according to
the ordinary dialect; and of these is compounded Hyksos: but some say that these people were Arabians.
These people, whom we have before named kings, and called shepherds also, and their descendants, kept
possession of Egypt 511 years. That the kings of Thebais and the other parts of Egypt made an
insurrection against the shepherds, and that there a terrible and long war was made between them. That
under a king, whose name was Misphragmuthosis, the shepherds were subdued by him, and were indeed
driven out of other parts of Egypt, but were shut up in a place that contained 10,000 acres; this place
was named Avaris. That the shepherds built a wall round all this place, which was a large and a strong
wall, and this in order to keep all their possessions and their prey within a place of strength, but that
Thummosis the son of Misphragmuthosis made an attempt to take them by force and by siege, with
480,000 men to lie rotund about them, but that, upon his despair of taking the place by that siege, they
came to a composition with them, that they should leave Egypt, and go, without any harm to be done to
them, whithersoever they would; and that, after this composition was made, they went away with their
whole families and effects, not fewer in number than 240,000, and took their journey from Egypt,
through the wilderness, for Syria; but that as they were in fear of the Assyrians, who had then the
dominion over Asia, they built a city in that country which is now called Judea, and that large enough to
contain this great number of men, and called it Jerusalem. That this nation, thus called Shepherds, were
also called Captives, in their sacred books. When this people or shepherds were gone out of Egypt to
Jerusalem, Tethtmosis the king of Egypt [Ahmose], who drove them out, reigned afterward 25 years
and 4 months, and then died [...] how this namesake of his told him that he might see the gods, if he
would clear the whole country of the lepers and of the other impure people; that the king was pleased with
this injunction, and got together all that had any defect in their bodies out of Egypt; and that their
number was 80,000; whom he sent to those quarries which are on the east side of the Nile, that they
might work in them, and might be separated from the rest of the Egyptians. There were some of the
learned priests that were polluted with the leprosy; but that still this Amenophis, the wise man and the
prophet, was afraid that the gods would be angry at him and at the king, if there should appear to have
been violence offered them; who also added this further, [out of his sagacity about futurities,] that certain
people would come to the assistance of these polluted wretches, and would conquer Egypt, and keep it in
their possession thirteen years; that, however, he durst not tell the king of these things, but that he left a
writing behind him about all those matters, and then slew himself, which made the king disconsolate.
After those that were sent to work in the quarries had continued in that miserable state for a long while,
the king was desired that he would set apart the city Avaris, which was then left desolate of the
shepherds, for their habitation and protection; which desire he granted them. Now this city, according to
the ancient theology, was Typho's city. But when these men were gotten into it, and found the place fit for
a revolt, they appointed themselves a ruler out of the priests of Heliopolis, whose name was Osarsiph,
and they took their oaths that they would be obedient to him in all things. He then, in the first place,
made this law for them, That they should neither worship the Egyptian gods, nor should abstain from
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
any one of those sacred animals which they have in the highest esteem, but kill and destroy them all; that
they should join themselves to nobody but to those that were of this confederacy. When he had made such
laws as these, and many more such as were mainly opposite to the customs of the Egyptians, he gave
order that they should use the multitude of the hands they had in building walls about their City, and
make themselves ready for a war with king Amenophis, while he did himself take into his friendship the
other priests, and those that were polluted with them, and sent ambassadors to those shepherds who had
been driven out of the land by Tethmosis [Ahmose] to the city called Jerusalem; whereby he informed
them of his own affairs, and of the state of those others that had been treated after such an ignominious
manner, and desired that they would come with one consent to his assistance in this war against Egypt.
He also promised that he would, in the first place, bring them back to their ancient city and country
Avaris, and provide a plentiful maintenance for their multitude; that he would protect them and fight for
them as occasion should require, and would easily reduce the country under their dominion. These
shepherds were all very glad of this message, and came away with alacrity all together, being in number
200,000 men; and in a little time they came to Avaris. And now Amenophis the king of Egypt, upon
his being informed of their invasion, was in great confusion, as calling to mind what Amenophis, the son
of Papis, had foretold him; and, in the first place, he assembled the multitude of the Egyptians, and
took counsel with their leaders, and sent for their sacred animals to him, especially for those that were
principally worshipped in their temples, and gave a particular charge to the priests distinctly, that they
should hide the images of their gods with the utmost care he also sent his son Sethos, who was also
named Ramesses, from his father Rhampses, being but 5 years old, to a friend of his. He then passed on
with the rest of the Egyptians, being 300,000 of the most warlike of them, against the enemy, who met
them. Yet did he not join battle with them; but thinking that would be to fight against the gods, he
returned back and came to Memphis, where he took Apis and the other sacred animals which he had
sent for to him, and presently marched into Ethiopia, together with his whole army and multitude of
Egyptians; for the king of Ethiopia was under an obligation to him, on which account he received him,
and took care of all the multitude that was with him, while the country supplied all that was necessary
for the food of the men. He also allotted cities and villages for this exile, that was to be from its
beginning during those fatally determined 13 years. Moreover, he pitched a camp for his Ethiopian
army, as a guard to king Amenophis, upon the borders of Egypt. And this was the state of things in
Ethiopia. But for the people of Jerusalem, when they came down together with the polluted Egyptians,
they treated the men in such a barbarous manner, that those who saw how they subdued the
aforementioned country, and the horrid wickedness they were guilty of, thought it a most dreadful thing;
for they did not only set the cities and villages on fire but were not satisfied till they had been guilty of
sacrilege, and destroyed the images of the gods, and used them in roasting those sacred animals that used
to be worshipped, and forced the priests and prophets to be the executioners and murderers of those
animals, and then ejected them naked out of the country. It was also reported that the priest, who
ordained their polity and their laws, was by birth of Heliopolis, and his name Osarsiph [AuserreApophi], from Osiris, who was the god of Heliopolis; but that when he was gone over to these people,
his name was changed, and he was called Moses. After this, Amenophis returned back from Ethiopia
with a great army, as did his son Ahampses with another army also, and that both of them joined battle
with the shepherds and the polluted people, and beat them, and slew a great many of them, and pursued
them to the bounds of Syria (Against Apion I:75-91, 237-266).
318
Marble of Paros (written in 264 BCE): From when Cadmus the son of Agenor came to
Thebes [... and] built the Cadmeia, 1255 years (1519 BCE). From when [the first fifty-oared] ship
[prepared by Danaus] sailed from Egypt to Greece (...) 1247 years (1511 BCE).
Greek inscription (dated 234 BCE): The inhabitants of these [Balearic] islands were the
Canaanites fleeing from the face of Joshua the son of Nun (Paschal Chronicle dated 630)319.
F. JACOBY - Die Fragmente der Griechischen Historiker
Leiden 1962 Ed. E.J. Brill pp. 993,994.
319 A.J. FRENDO - Two Long-Lost Phoenician Inscriptions and the Emergence of Ancient Israel
in: Palestine Exploration Quarterly 134,1 (2002) pp. 37-43.
318
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Demetrius the Chronograph (c. 220 BCE), a Jewish chronicler: Since Adam [in 5307
BCE] until the birth of Abraham 3334 years (1973 BCE), until the entry of Jacob into Egypt 3624
years (1683 BCE), until the Exodus of Moses 3839 years (1468 BCE) (Stomata I:21, 141;
Preparatio evangelica IX:21:1-19).
Artapanus of Alexandria (c. 200 BCE), a Hellenistic Jewish historian: Moses was the
master of Orpheus. As an adult, he transmitted to people much useful knowledge (...) he confided the
sacred letters to the priests, and there were also cats, dogs, ibis (...) This is why Moses was loved by
crowds, and the priests, who considered him worthy of divine honours, called him Hermes, since he
interpreted the sacred letters (Preparatio evangelical IX:27).
320
Eupolemus (c. 160 BCE), a Hellenistic Jewish historian: Moses was the first to acquire
wisdom and transmit writing to the Jews, the Phoenicians received it, then from the Phoenicians to the
Greeks. Moses was the first to write laws for the Jews (Preparatio evangelica IX:26).
Diodorus of Sicily (c. 50 BCE), a Greek historian: Cadmus, who was a citizen of Egyptian
Thebes, begat several children, of whom one was Semelê (...) And since he had become conversant with
the teachings of the Egyptians about the gods, he transferred the birth of the ancient Osiris to more
recent times, and, out of regard for the descendants of Cadmus, instituted a new initiation (...) In
general, they say, the Greeks appropriate to themselves the most renowned of both Egyptian heroes and
gods, and so also the colonies sent out by them (...) Now the Egyptians say that also after these events a
great number of colonies were spread from Egypt over all the inhabited world. To Babylon, for instance,
colonists were led by Belus [Baal], who was held to be the son of Poseidon and Libya; and after
establishing himself on the Euphrates (...) They say also that those who set forth with Danaus, likewise
from Egypt, settled what is practically the oldest city in Greece, Argos, and that the nation of the Colchi
in Pontus and that of the Jews, which lies between Arabia and Syria, were founded as colonies by
certain emigrants from their country (...) among the Jews Moses referred his laws to the god who is
invoked as Iao (Historical Library I:23, 28, 94). Many generations later men supposed that
Cadmus, the son of Agenor, had been the first to bring the letters from Phoenicia to Greece; and after
the time of Cadmus onwards the Greeks were believed to have kept making new discoveries in the science
of writing, since a sort of general ignorance of the facts possessed the Greeks (...) About this time
Danaüs together with his daughters fled from Egypt (...) And a little after this time Cadmus, the son of
Agenor, having been dispatched by the king to seek out Europe, put ashore at Rhodes (...) Now
Cadmus honoured likewise the Lindian Athena with votive offerings, one of which was a striking
bronze cauldron worked after the ancient manner, and this carried an inscription in Phoenician letters,
which, men say, were first brought from Phoenicia to Greece (...) To the Muses, we are further told, it
was given by their father Zeus to discover the letters and to combine words in the way which is designated
poetry. And in reply to those who say that the Syrians are the discoverers of the letters, the Phoenicians
having learned them from the Syrians and then passed them on to the Greeks, and that these
Phoenicians are those who sailed to Europe together with Cadmus and this is the reason why the
Greeks call the letters "Phoenician," men tell us, on the other hand, that the Phoenicians were not the
first to make this discovery, but that they did no more than to change the forms of the letters, whereupon
the majority of mankind made use of the way of writing them as the Phoenicians devised it, and so the
letters received the designation we have mentioned above (Historical Library V:57-58,74) The
ancestors of the Jews had been driven out of all Egypt as men who were impious and detested by the
gods. For by way of purging the country all persons who had white or leprous marks on their bodies had
been assembled and driven across the border, as being under a curse; the refugees had occupied the
territory round about Jerusalem, and having organized the nation of the Jews had made their hatred of
mankind into a tradition, and on this account had introduced utterly outlandish laws: not to break
bread with any other race, nor to show them any good will at all (...) Antiochus, called Epiphanes, on
defeating the Jews had entered the innermost sanctuary of the god's temple, where it was lawful for the
priest alone to enter. Finding there a marble statue of a heavily bearded man seated on an ass, with a
B.Z. WACHOLDER - Eupolemus. A Study of Judeo-Greek Literature
Cincinnati 1974 Ed. Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion pp. 71-96.
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book in his hands, he supposed it to be an image of Moses, the founder of Jerusalem and organizer of
the nation, the man, moreover, who had ordained for the Jews their misanthropic and lawless customs
(Historical Library XXXIV:1). Now that we are about to record the war against the Jews, we
consider it appropriate to give first a summary account of the establishment of the nation, from its
origins, and of the practices observed among them. When in ancient times a pestilence arose in Egypt,
the common people ascribed their troubles to the workings of a divine agency; for indeed with many
strangers of all sorts dwelling in their midst and practising different rites of religion and sacrifice, their
own traditional observances in honour of the gods had fallen into disuse. Hence the natives of the land
surmised that unless they removed the foreigners, their troubles would never be resolved. At once,
therefore, the aliens were driven from the country, and the most outstanding and active among them
banded together and, as some say, were cast ashore in Greece and certain other regions ; their leaders
were notable men, chief among them being Danaüs and Cadmus. But the greater number were driven
into what is now called Judaea, which is not far distant from Egypt and was at that time utterly
uninhabited. The colony was headed by a man called Moses, outstanding both for his wisdom and for
his courage. On taking possession of the land he founded, besides other cities, one that is now the most
renowned of all, called Jerusalem. In addition lie established the temple that they hold in chief veneration,
instituted their forms of worship and ritual, drew up their laws and ordered their political institutions.
He also divided them into twelve tribes, since this is regarded as the must perfect number and
corresponds to the number of months that make up a year. But he had no images whatsoever of the gods
made for them, being of the opinion that God is not in human form; rather the Heaven that surrounds
the earth is alone divine, and rules the universe. The sacrifices that he established differ frond those of
other nations, as does their way of living, for as a result of their own expulsion from Egypt he introduced
an unsocial and intolerant mode of life. He picked out the men of most refinement and with the greatest
ability to head the entire nation, and appointed them priests; and he ordained that they should occupy
themselves with the temple and the honours and sacrifices offered to their god. These same men he
appointed to be judges in all major disputes, and entrusted to them the guardianship of the laws and
customs. For this reason the Jews never have a king, and authority over the people is regularly vested in
whichever priest is regarded as superior to his colleagues in wisdom and virtue. They call this man the
high priest, and believe that he acts as a messenger to them of God's commandments. It is he, we are
told, who in their assemblies and other gatherings announces what is ordained, and the Jews are so docile
in such matters that straightway they fall to the ground and do reverence to the high priest when he
expounds the commandments to them. And at the end of their laws there is even appended the
statement: These are the words that Moses heard from God and declares unto the Jews. Their lawgiver
was careful also to make provision for warfare, and required the young men to cultivate manliness,
steadfastness, and, generally, the endurance of every hardship. He led out military expeditions against
the neighbouring tribes, and after annexing much land apportioned it out, assigning equal allotments to
private citizens and greater ones to the priests, in order that they, by virtue of receiving more ample
revenues, might be undistracted and apply themselves continually to the worship of God (Historical
Library XL:3).
Strabo (c. 20 CE), a Greek geographer, philosopher and historian: An Egyptian priest
named Moses, who possessed a portion of the country called the Lower [Egypt], being dissatisfied with
the established institutions there, left it and came to Judea with a large body of people who worshipped
the Divinity. He declared and taught that the Egyptians and Africans entertained erroneous sentiments,
in representing the Divinity under the likeness of wild beasts and cattle of the field; that the Greeks also
were in error in making images of their gods after the human form. For God [said he] may be this one
thing which encompasses us all, land and sea, which we call heaven, or the universe, or the nature of
things. Who then of any understanding would venture to form an image of this Deity, resembling
anything with which we are conversant? on the contrary, we ought not to carve any images, but to set
apart some sacred ground and a shrine worthy of the Deity, and to worship Him without any similitude.
He taught that those who made fortunate dreams were to be permitted to sleep in the temple, where they
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might dream both for themselves and others; that those who practised temperance and justice, and none
else, might expect good, or some gift or sign from the God, from time to time. By such doctrine Moses
persuaded a large body of right-minded persons to accompany him to the place where Jerusalem now
stands. He easily obtained possession of it, as the spot was not such as to excite jealousy, nor for which
there could be any fierce contention; for it is rocky, and, although well supplied with water, it is
surrounded by a barren and waterless territory. The space within [the city] is 60 stadia [in
circumference], with rock underneath the surface. Instead of arms, he taught that their defence was in
their sacred things and the Divinity, for whom he was desirous of finding a settled place, promising to the
people to deliver such a kind of worship and religion as should not burthen those who adopted it with
great expense, nor molest them with [so-called] divine possessions, nor other absurd practices. Moses thus
obtained their good opinion, and established no ordinary kind of government. All the nations around
willingly united themselves to him, allured by his discourses and promises (Geography XVI:2:35-36).
Pline the Elder (c. 70 CE), a Roman naturalist: I have always been of opinion, that letters were
of Assyrian origin, but other writers, Gellius, for instance, suppose that they were invented in Egypt by
Mercury: others, again, will have it that they were discovered by the Syrians; and that Cadmus brought
from Phœnicia 16 letters into Greece. To these, Palamedes, it is said, at the time of the Trojan war,
added these 4:H Y Φ X. Simonides, the lyric poet, afterwards added a like number Ψ Ξ Ω Θ; the
sounds denoted by all of which are now received into our alphabet (Natural History VII:57).
Josephus (c. 95 CE), a Romano-Jewish historian and hagiographer of priestly and royal
ancestry: Manetho at all probable, wherein he relates the change of his name, and says that "he was
formerly called Osarsiph;" and this a name no way agreeable to the other, while his true name was
Moses, and signifies a person who is preserved out of the water, for the Egyptians call water Mou. I
think, therefore, I have made it sufficiently evident that Manetho, while he followed his ancient records,
did not much mistake the truth of the history; but that when he had recourse to fabulous stories, without
any certain author, he either forged them himself, without any probability, or else gave credit to some men
who spake so out of their ill-will to us. (Against Apion I: 285-287,290).
Tacitus (c. 100 CE), a senator and a historian of the Roman Empire: The Egyptians, in
their animal-pictures, were the first people to represent thought by symbols: these, the earliest documents
of human history, are visible to‑day, impressed upon stone. They describe themselves also as the inventors
of the alphabet: from Egypt, they consider, the Phoenicians, who were predominant at sea, imported the
knowledge into Greece, and gained the credit of discovering what they had borrowed. For the tradition
runs that it was Cadmus, arriving with a Phoenician fleet, who taught the art to the still uncivilized
Greek peoples. Others relate that Cecrops of Athens (or Linus of Thebes) and, in the Trojan era,
Palamedes of Argos, invented sixteen letters, the rest being added later by different authors, particularly
Simonides. In Italy the Etruscans learned the lesson from the Corinthian Demaratus, the Aborigines
from Evander the Arcadian; and in form the Latin characters are identical with those of the earliest
Greeks. But, in our case too, the original number was small, and additions were made subsequently: a
precedent for Claudius, who appended three more letters, which had their vogue during his reign, then fell
into desuetude, but still meet the eye on the official bronzes fixed in the forums and temples (Annals
XI:14). Some say that the Jews were fugitives from the island of Crete, who settled on the nearest coast
of Africa about the time when Saturn was driven from his throne by the power of Jupiter. Evidence of
this is sought in the name (...) Others assert that in the reign of Isis the overflowing population of Egypt,
led by Hierosolymus and Judas, discharged itself into the neighbouring countries. Many, again, say that
they were a race of Ethiopian origin, who in the time of king Cepheus were driven by fear and hatred of
their neighbours to seek a new dwelling-place. Others describe them as an Assyrian horde who, not
having sufficient territory, took possession of part of Egypt, and founded cities of their own in what is
called the Hebrew country, lying on the borders of Syria. Others, again, assign a very distinguished
origin to the Jews, alleging that they were the Solymi, a nation celebrated in the poems of Homer, who
called the city which they founded Hierosolyma after their own name. Most writers, however, agree in
stating that once a disease, which horribly disfigured the body, broke out over Egypt; that king
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
Bocchoris, seeking a remedy, consulted the oracle of Hammon, and was bidden to cleanse his realm, and
to convey into some foreign land this race detested by the gods. The people, who had been collected after
diligent search, finding themselves left in a desert, sat for the most part in a stupor of grief, till one of the
exiles, Moses by name, warned them not to look for any relief from God or man, forsaken as they were
of both, but to trust to themselves, taking for their heaven-sent leader that man who should first help
them to be quit of their present misery. They agreed, and in utter ignorance began to advance at random.
Nothing, however, distressed them so much as the scarcity of water, and they had sunk ready to perish in
all directions over the plain, when a herd of donkeys was seen to retire from their pasture to a rock
shaded by trees. Moses followed them, and, guided by the appearance of a grassy spot, discovered an
abundant spring of water. This furnished relief. After a continuous journey for six days, on the seventh
they possessed themselves of a country, from which they expelled the inhabitants, and in which they
founded a city and a temple. Moses, wishing to secure for the future his authority over the nation, gave
them a novel form of worship, opposed to all that is practised by other men. Things sacred with us, with
them have no sanctity, while they allow what with us is forbidden. In their holy place they have
consecrated an image of the animal by whose guidance they found deliverance from their long and thirsty
wanderings. They slay the ram, seemingly in derision of Hammon, and they sacrifice the ox, because the
Egyptians worship it as Apis. They abstain from swine's flesh, in consideration of what they suffered
when they were infected by the leprosy to which this animal is liable. By their frequent fasts they still
bear witness to the long hunger of former days, and the Jewish bread, made without leaven, is retained as
a memorial of their hurried seizure of corn. We are told that the rest of the seventh day was adopted,
because this day brought with it a termination of their toils; after a while the charm of indolence
beguilded them into giving up the seventh year also to inaction. But others say that it is an observance in
honour of Saturn, either from the primitive elements of their faith having been transmitted from the
Idaei, who are said to have shared the flight of that God, and to have founded the race, or from the
circumstance that of the seven stars which rule the destinies of men Saturn moves in the highest orbit and
with the mightiest power, and that many of the heavenly bodies complete their revolutions and courses in
multiples of seven. This worship, however introduced, is upheld by its antiquity; all their other customs,
which are at once perverse and disgusting, owe their strength to their very badness. The most degraded
out of other races, scorning their national beliefs, brought to them their contributions and presents. This
augmented the wealth of the Jews, as also did the fact, that among themselves they are inflexibly honest
and ever ready to show compassion, though they regard the rest of mankind with all the hatred of
enemies. They sit apart at meals, they sleep apart, and though, as a nation, they are singularly prone to
lust, they abstain from intercourse with foreign women; among themselves nothing is unlawful.
Circumcision was adopted by them as a mark of difference from other men. Those who come over to their
religion adopt the practice, and have this lesson first instilled into them, to despise all gods, to disown
their country, and set at nought parents, children, and brethren. Still they provide for the increase of their
numbers. It is a crime among them to kill any newly-born infant. They hold that the souls of all who
perish in battle or by the hands of the executioner are immortal. Hence a passion for propagating their
race and a contempt for death. They are wont to bury rather than to burn their dead, following in this
the Egyptian custom; they bestow the same care on the dead, and they hold the same belief about the
lower world. Quite different is their faith about things divine. The Egyptians worship many animals
and images of monstrous form; the Jews have purely mental conceptions of Deity, as one in essence. They
call those profane who make representations of God in human shape out of perishable materials. They
believe that Being to be supreme and eternal, neither capable of representation, nor of decay. They
therefore do not allow any images to stand in their cities, much less in their temples. This flattery is not
paid to their kings, nor this honour to our Emperors. From the fact, however, that their priests used to
chant to the music of flutes and cymbals, and to wear garlands of ivy, and that a golden vine was found
in the temple, some have thought that they worshipped father Liber, the conqueror of the East, though
their institutions do not by any means harmonize with the theory; for Liber established a festive and
cheerful worship, while the Jewish religion is tasteless and mean (History V:2-5).
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Tatian (160-170 CE) an Assyrian early Christian writer and theologian: But now it seems
proper for me to demonstrate that our philosophy is older than the systems of the Greeks. Moses and
Homer shall be our limits, each of them being of great antiquity; the one being the oldest of poets and
historians, and the other the founder of all barbarian wisdom. Let us, then, institute a comparison
between them; and we shall find that our doctrines are older, not only than those of the Greeks, but than
the invention of letters (...) the Egyptians also there are accurate chronicles. Ptolemy, not the king, but a
priest of Mendes, is the interpreter of their affairs. This writer, narrating the acts of the kings, says that
the departure of the Jews from Egypt to the places whither they went occurred in the time of king
Amosis, under the leadership of Moses. He thus speaks: Amosis lived in the time of king Inachus.
After him, Apion the grammarian, a man most highly esteemed, in the 4th book of his Aegyptiaca
(there are five books of his), besides many other things, says that Amosis destroyed Avaris in the time of
the Argive Inachus, as the Mendesian Ptolemy wrote in his annals. But the time from Inachus to the
taking of Troy occupies 20 generations (...) every intelligent person will most carefully observe that,
according to the tradition of the Greeks, they possessed no historical composition; for Cadmus, who
taught them letters, came into Boeotia many generations later. But after Inachus, under Phoroneus, a
check was with difficulty given to their savage and nomadic life, and they entered upon a new order of
things. Wherefore, if Moses is shown to be contemporary with Inachus, he is 400 years older than the
Trojan war [1184 BCE] (To the Greeks XXXI, XXXVIII, XXXIX).
Eusebius (c. 300 CE), a Roman historian, exegete and Christian polemicist: Orpheus, son
of Oeagrus, first brought over with him the mysteries of the Egyptians, and imparted them to the
Greeks; just, in fact, as Cadmus brought to them the Phoenician mysteries together with the knowledge
of letters: for the Greeks up to that time did not yet know the use of the alphabet (...) From Misor was
born Taautus, who invented the first written alphabet; the Egyptians called him Thouth, the
Alexandrians Thoth, and the Greeks Hermes (...) Tardily and painfully they learned the nature of
letters. Those at least who assign the greatest antiquity to their use of them boast of having learned it
from the Phoenicians and Cadmus. Nevertheless no one could show any record that is preserved even
from that time either in temples or on public monuments: seeing that there has been great doubt and
inquiry, whether even those who so many years later went on the expedition to Troy, made use of writing;
and the true opinion is rather that they were ignorant of the use now made of written letters (The
Preparation of the Gospel I:6:4, I:10:14, X:7:5-8). In the year 508 of Abraham [born in 2016
BCE]: Egypt left (1508 BCE) under Moses leading (...) in the year 543 (1473 CE): Danaus calls
Argos after being expelled from Egypt (...) In the year 563 of Abraham (1453 BCE) Cadmus, who
left Egyptian Thebes for Syria, reigns in Tyre and Sidon (Chronicle of Eusebius/Jerome)
Moses of Khoren (370-486 CE), a prominent Armenian historian quoted by the
historian Procopius of Caesarea (500-562 CE) in one of his Book (History of the Wars
IV:10:21-22), wrote that a Phoenician inscription appearing on two columns built (c.
700 BCE ?) in the city of Tigisis in Numidia, bore the following sentence: we are they who
fled from the face of Joshua, the robber, the son of Nun.
As one can see, the classical authors have preserved the memory of the Egyptian
version of a Moses, priest of the god Seth, hated by gods and expelled at the head of a
band of cursed lepers. The influence of Egyptian propaganda and prejudices from Greek
and Roman authors are obvious. The confusion of Seth under its animal form is originally
an absurd legend: the Jews would have worshiped a donkey in their Temple! Thus,
according to Plutarch, Jewish customs were derived from the god Typhon (Seth)
represented by a red donkey (De Iside et Osiride §§ 30-31). To eradicate such prejudices,
Josephus explained: Apion ought to have had a regard to these facts, unless he had himself had either a
donkey's heart or a dog's impudence; of such a dog I mean as they worship; for he had no other external
reason for the lies he tells of us. As for us Jews, we ascribe no honour or power to donkeys, as do the
Egyptians to crocodiles and asps, when they esteem such as are seized upon by the former, or bitten by the
latter, to be happy persons, and persons worthy of God. Donkeys are the same with us which they are with
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
other wise men, viz. creatures that bear the burdens that we lay upon them; but if they come to our
thrashing-floors and eat our corn, or do not perform what we impose upon them, we beat them with a great
many stripes, because it is their business to minister to us in our husbandry affairs. But this Apion of ours
was either perfectly unskilful in the composition of such fallacious discourses, or however, when he begun
[somewhat better], he was not able to persevere in what he had undertaken, since he hath no manner of
success in those reproaches he casts upon us (Against Apion II:79-81).
For the Egyptians, Seth generally personified the god of foreign lands, which has
led some to believe that Egyptian Christians worshiped a god with the head of a donkey321,
as seen on this graffito322 (opposite figure) of the 2nd century of our
era (the crux ansata is Egyptian). The Greek text ALEXAMENOC
CEBETE ΘEON means "Alexamenos venerates his god". However,
as a representative of Seth, the donkey was an ambivalent
symbolism323. Tertullian (155-222) laughed at such rumours since
he wrote the following remark : But recently in this city, what is really a
new representation of our god has been made public, since a certain criminal,
hired to trick the wild beasts, exhibited a picture with an inscription to the
following effect: 'The Christian God, the Offspring of a Donkey.' He had
donkeys' ears, one foot hoofed, was dressed in the toga and carried a book. We
laughed both at the name and the figure (The Apology XVI:12).
The story of Manetho is heavily influenced by Egyptian propaganda, but its
chronological indications, without religious implications, are usually quite accurate. For
example, he wrote: When this people or shepherds were gone out of Egypt to Jerusalem, Tethmosis the
king of Egypt, who drove them out, reigned afterward 25 years and 4 months. Tethmosis (also written
Thummosis) the first king of the 18th Dynasty, was Ahmose and his father was Seqenenre
Taa. This indisputable chronological benchmark provides the following equivalences:
Tethmosis/Thummosis/ Ahmose; Misphragmuthosis/ Seqenenre Taa; Amenophis/ Kamose;
Apophis/ Apopi; Osarsiph/Osarsepho/ Aauserre-Apopi; Salitis/ Joseph?; Seth/Typhon/ The
Lord of the land. According to these equivalences, Manetho's account is:
There was a king of ours whose name was Tutimaeus. Under him it came to pass (...) they made
one of themselves king, whose name was Joseph?; he also lived at Memphis (...) he found in the Sethroite
nome, a city very proper for this purpose, and which lay upon the Bubastic channel, but with regard to a
certain theologic notion was called Avaris (...) it was the Lord of the land's city (I:75-78, 238). Joseph
reigned 19 years, Bnon reigned 44 years, Arpachan reigned 36 years and 7 months, Apopi reigned 61
years, Jannas reigned 51 years and 1 month, Assis reigned 49 years and 2 months (I:79-81). That under
a king, whose name was Seqenenre, the Hyksos were subdued by him, and were indeed driven out of other
parts of Egypt, but were shut up in a place that contained 10,000 acres; this place was named Avaris
(I:86). Ahmose the son of Seqenenre made an attempt to take them by force and by siege, with 480,000
men to lie rotund about them, but that, upon his despair of taking the place by that siege, they came to a
composition with them, that they should leave Egypt, and go, without any harm to be done to them,
whithersoever they would; and that, after this composition was made, they went away with their whole
families and effects, not fewer in number than 240,000, and took their journey from Egypt, through the
wilderness, for Syria324; but that as they were in fear of the Assyrians, who had then the dominion over
Asia (!), they built a city in that country which is now called Judea, and that large enough to contain this
J.M. ROBINSON – The Nag Hammadi Library
Leiden 1988 Ed. E.J. Brill pp. 208-219.
322 R. LANCIANI -The Palace of the Caesars
in: Ancient Rome in the Light of Recent Discoveries (Boston 1898).
323 R.-J. THIBAUD –Dictionnaire de mythologie et de symbolique égyptienne
Paris 1996, Éd. Dervy pp. 22-23, 320-321.
324 This precision: for Syria; but that as they were in fear of the Assyrians, who had then the dominion over Asia, is commented as mistake. However,
the mighty city of Babylon was sacked by the Hittites in 1499 BCE enabling Kassites kings to dominate the region of Assyria for several
centuries. According to the Masoretic chronology, the Israelites entered Canaan in 1493 BCE, 6 years later.
321
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great number of men, and called it Jerusalem (I:88-90). They [Hyksos] appointed themselves a ruler out of
the priests of Heliopolis, whose name was Aauserre-Apopi, and they took their oaths that they would be
obedient to him in all things. He then, in the first place, made this law for them, That they should neither
worship the Egyptian gods, nor should abstain from any one of those sacred animals which they have in the
highest esteem (...) When he had made such laws as these, and many more such as were mainly opposite to
the customs of the Egyptians, he gave order that they should use the multitude of the hands they had in
building walls about their City, and make themselves ready for a war with king Kamose, while he did
himself take into his friendship the other priests, and those that were polluted with them, and sent
ambassadors to those shepherds who had been driven out of the land by Ahmose to the city called Jerusalem
(...) (Kamose) marched into Ethiopia, together with his whole army and multitude of Egyptians; for the
king of Ethiopia was under an obligation to him, on which account he received him, and took care of all the
multitude that was with him, while the country supplied all that was necessary for the food of the men. He
also allotted cities and villages for this exile, that was to be from its beginning during those fatally
determined [1]3 years. Moreover, he pitched a camp for his Ethiopian army, as a guard to king Kamose,
upon the borders of Egypt (...) But for the people of Jerusalem, when they came down together with the
polluted Egyptians, they treated the men in such a barbarous manner, that those who saw how they subdued
the aforementioned country, and the horrid wickedness they were guilty of, thought it a most dreadful thing;
for they did not only set the cities and villages on fire but were not satisfied till they had been guilty of
sacrilege, and destroyed the images of the gods, and used them in roasting those sacred animals that used to
be worshipped, and forced the priests and prophets to be the executioners and murderers of those animals,
and then ejected them naked out of the country (I:238-241, 265-266). The priest, who ordained their
polity and their laws, was by birth of Heliopolis, and his name Aauserre-Apopi, from Osiris, who was the
god of Heliopolis; but that when he was gone over to these people, his name was changed, and he was called
Moses. After this, Kamose returned back from Ethiopia with a great army, as did his son Ahampses with
another army also, and that both of them joined battle with the Hyksos and the polluted people, and beat
them, and slew a great many of them, and pursued them to the bounds of Syria (I:250, 265). When this
people or Hyksos were gone out of Egypt to Jerusalem, Ahmose the king of Egypt, who drove them out,
reigned afterward 25 years and 4 months (I:94, 231; II:16).
Manetho's story is therefore very similar to that appearing on the stele of Kamose.
It is interesting to notice that Josephus disagreed with Manetho on a linguistic point
concerning the name of Moses: wherein he [Manetho] relates the change of his name, and says that
"he was formerly called Osarsiph;" and this a name no way agreeable to the other, while his true name was
Moses, and signifies a person who is preserved out of the water, for the Egyptians call water Mou (Against
Apion I:286). Thermuthis imposed this name Mouses upon him, from what had happened when he was
put into the river; for the Egyptians call water by the name of Mou, and such as are saved out of it, by the
name of Uses: so by putting these two words together, they imposed this name upon him (Antiquities of
the Jews II:238). Josephus was partly right, because the first part of Mouses' name meant
"water (mou)" in Egyptian, as confirmed by Philo of Alexandria (De Vita Mosis I:17),
however the second part does not mean "saved out of it" but merely "son (s3)" in
Egyptian, like in the frequent expression "son of Ra (s3 r‘)". Ramses (r‘ mss) means
"spawned by Sun god (Ra)", Ahmose (I‘ḥ ms) "spawned by Moon god (Iah)", Musa (mw s3)
"son of Water (god Nile)", because the names linked to the pharaoh are governed by
honorific anteposition. For example, the expression "like Ra" is written r‘-mi "Ra like", the
word "king" pronounced n(y)-sut is written sut-n(y).
A lot has been written about the explanation of the name of Moses. According to
the biblical text it means "pulling out of [the water]", assuming an unusual Hebrew form
mashuy "being pulled out." This name is used in conjunction with the people who would
"be pulled out of [the water]" by the man who would become Mosheh "pulling [his people
out of the water] in Isaiah 63:11,12". The first vowel of the name Moses is "o" in the
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
Hebrew text and "ou" in the Greek text (Mouses), but never "a" or "e", which prevents a
reconciliation with the Egyptian word mes, meaning "spawned by", found in the name Rames-es. The biblical text has preserved the Egyptian vocalization of this word in the name
Ra-mes-es (Gn 47:11), which is different from the Hebrew name Mosheh. If the name of
Moses came from the Egyptian mes, the biblical text would have preserved this form, or
would be likely Hebraicized in meš325. Anyway, neither Flavius nor Manetho knew
Osarseph. According to Manetho's account, Osarseph's name came from Osiris, the god of
Heliopolis ("city of the sun", thus the god of Heliopolis was Ra). According to Chaeremon,
director of the Museum of Alexandria (c. 40 CE), the name of Joseph in Egypt was
Peteseph (not Salitis) and the name of Moses was Tisithen (Against Apion I:290).
Obviously former names of the protagonists were no longer understood by most
historians326 quoted by Josephus. The chronological sequence of events recounted by
Manetho solves a puzzle: Apopi, the last king of the 15th dynasty reappeared 40 years later,
just before the expulsion of the Hyksos.
King of Kush
King of Egypt
13th Dynasty
1780
1740
-
Tutimaeus (?)
1640
-1570
17th Dynasty
1570
-
[Ethiopia]
1544-1533
1533-1530
[?]
1530-1505
Misphragmuthosis (Seqenenre)
Amenophis (Kamose)
18th Dynasty
Tethmosis/Thummosis (Ahmose)
King of foreign Lands (Hyksos)
14th Dynasty
Salitis (Joseph ?)
Bnon (?)
15th Dynasty (Avaris)
Arpachan (?)
Apophis (Apopi)
16th Dynasty
Jannas (Jannes ?)
Assis (?)
Osarsiph (Aauserre-Apopi)
Osarsipho (Aauserre-Apopi)
Osarsipho => Moses
This chronological scheme involves identifying the expulsion of the Hyksos with
the biblical Exodus, since Osarseph was Moses. This identification, which was that of
ancient historians, would explain satisfactorily the catastrophic calamities experienced by
the Egyptians, but seems to contradict the biblical account which says: Consequently the
Egyptians made the sons of Israel slave under tyranny. And they kept making their life bitter with hard
slavery at clay mortar and bricks and with every form of slavery in the field, yes, every form of slavery of
theirs in which they used them as slaves under tyranny (Ex 1:13-14). This erroneous view is derived
from a mistranslation of the word ebed "servant, domestic, worker": So the Egyptians gave them
no mercy in the demands they made, making their lives miserable with hard labour: with digging clay,
making bricks, doing various kinds of field —work— all sorts of labour that they imposed on them
without mercy (New Jerusalem Bible). In the Egyptian language, as in Old Hebrew, the word
‘slave’ did not exist, because every Egyptian was a servant of the Pharaoh (consequently the
word "free man" does not exist either), its meaning depends of the context. Ebed-melech,
for example, means "king's servant" that is "king's minister", but sometimes also "king's
flunkey". If the Hebrews were abused slaves, they would not have wanted to return to
Egypt after their departure, which was the case (Ex 16:3). It would be more appropriate to
speak of exploited, sometimes, overexploited workers (working poor).
The exchange between s and š is very frequent (but not understood). For example, the Egyptian name Amen-mes is rendered by
Aman-maša in Akkadian (letter EA 113), and the famous Ra‘-messu (Ramses) is rendered by Ria-mašeša (Hattusili treaty with Ramses).
326 J.G. GAGER – Moses in Greco-Roman Paganism
New York 1972 Ed. Abingdon Press 113-133.
325
101
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
102
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
APOPI ALIAS MOSES
The Greek word ‘Hyksos’ means ‘ruler of foreign lands (ḥq3 ḫ3swt)’ in Egyptian.
Thus, Joseph was the first Hyksos: And Pharaoh added to Joseph: See, I do place you over all the
land of Egypt. With that Pharaoh removed his signet ring from his own hand and put it upon Joseph’s
hand and clothed him with garments of fine linen and placed a necklace of gold about his neck. Moreover,
he had him ride in the second chariot of honour that he had, so that they should call out ahead of him,
“Avrekh!” thus putting him over all the land of Egypt. And Pharaoh further said to Joseph: I am
Pharaoh, but without your authorization no man may lift up his hand or his foot in all the land of Egypt.
After that Pharaoh called Joseph’s name Zaphenathpaneah and gave him Asenath the daughter of
Potiphera the priest of On [Heliopolis] as a wife. And Joseph began to go out over the land of Egypt. And
Joseph was 30 years old when he stood before Pharaoh the king of Egypt. Then Joseph went out from before
Pharaoh and toured about in all the land of Egypt. And during the 7 years of plenty the land went on
producing by the handfuls. And he kept collecting all the foodstuffs of the 7 years that came upon the land
of Egypt and he would put the foodstuffs in the cities (...) Accordingly Joseph came and reported to Pharaoh
and said: My father and my brothers and their flocks and their herds and all they have come from the land
of Canaan, and here they are in the land of Goshen. And from the whole number of his brothers he took 5
men, that he might present them to Pharaoh. Then Pharaoh said to his brothers: What is Your
occupation? So they said to Pharaoh: Your servants are herders of sheep, both we and our forefathers. After
that they said to Pharaoh: We have come to reside as aliens in the land, because there is no pasturage for
the flock that your servants have, for the famine is severe in the land of Canaan. And now let your servants
dwell, please, in the land of Goshen. At that Pharaoh said to Joseph: Your father and your brothers have
come here to you. The land of Egypt is at your disposal. Have your father and your brothers dwell in the
very best of the land. Let them dwell in the land of Goshen, and if you know that there are among them
able men, you must appoint them cattle chiefs over what is mine (Gn 41:41-48; 47:1-6).
The investiture ceremony of Joseph is quite consistent with Egyptian customs that
describe the enthronement of a vizier, second person of State. According to the biblical
account, Joseph officiated as vizier over a period of 14 years (1758-1744). Is there a trace of
Joseph in Egyptian documents? Pharaoh Sehetepibre is a good candidate. The Turin King
List mentions two kings with the same name: Sehetepibre I (1765-1760?) and Sehetepibre
II Hornedjheritef (1755-1750?) four lines later. There is obviously an oddity327, because
Sehetepibre had a name preceded by a strange affiliation sa aamu "son of Asiatics", whereas
he was an Egyptian king of the 13th Dynasty, not a Hyksos ruler, in addition, his birth name
means "He who satisfies the heart of Ra", which is typically Egyptian. Furthermore, on the
site of Tell el-Dab'a (Avaris), a vast palace whose existence was brief, a few years at most,
was not even completed. This building dates from the beginning of the 13th Dynasty.
Various details —including the discovery of a cylinder seal "Ruler of Retenu" in a style
typically Syrian, a lack of foundation deposits, remains of animals' offerings in a circular
pit— are foreign to Egyptian habits and make one think of Asia and a Canaanite influence.
This palace could have been the ‘summer residence’ of the king of Egypt Hetepibre ‘son of
Asiatics’, whose statue was found 100 meters away. These peculiarities may be explained as
follows: Sehetepibre was an actual Egyptian king of the 13th Dynasty who had delegated his
authority to an Asiatic vizier (Joseph). Having the proxy of Pharaoh, this vizier would act
on behalf of Pharaoh by preceding Pharaoh's name with the words "son of Asiatics". The
Egyptian word Aamu (‘3mw), translated as "Asiatics", could refer to Aramu "those of
Aram". Joseph was an Aramean, rendered "Syrian" in the Septuagint (Dt 26:5). The
Egyptian word Sutu (Swtw) is also translated as "Asiatics", but refers more specifically to
C. VANDERSLEYEN – L'Egypte et la vallée du Nil
Paris 1995 Éd. Presses Universitaires de France pp. 128-129.
327
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
Suteans of Moab, "Sons of Seth" according to Numbers 24:17. For example, Abisa[r], the
Hyksos ruler pictured at Beni Hassan (near Nefrusy), came from Moab (Su[t]u). Moabite
rulers are called "sheiks" in the Bible (Gn 36:29-40).
Joseph dwelt in the land of Goshen, also referred to as the ‘Field of Tanis’ (Gn
45:10; 47:11; Ps 78:12, 43) called ‘Field of Tanis (D‘w)’ in Egyptian. The choice of Tanis,
founded under Amenemhat I328 (1975-1946), was not due to chance. According to the
Bible, after arriving in Canaan at 75 years old (in 1963 BCE), Abraham changed the name
of Kiriath-arba “city of four” into Hebron “joining” (Gn 23:1) and then, 7 years later,
founded the city of Tanis “moving tents” (Nb 13:22). At the time of Joseph, this city had
probably a few hundred Asiatic inhabitants.
The order: you must appoint able men cattle chiefs over what is mine, entailed in fact
significant responsibilities. The title "cattle chiefs (sarê miqneh)" may also be understood as
"rulers of purchase property" (Gn 23:18). Livestock being the main wealth of Egypt, the
pharaohs established, from the very beginning, regular censuses of their livestock. When
the 7 years of famine ended, Joseph had to relinquish his post of vizier, however the
administration (able men) he put in place continued to operate until his death (in 1678
BCE). During this period (1744-1678), Hebrew administration leaders (14th Dynasty)
worked as viziers of the North (Delta). These Hebrew leaders are qualified as foolish,
because of their reliance on the Egyptian government, since this collaboration with the
authorities led them to support Egyptian taskmasters against Hebrew officers (Exodus
5:14). One reads: The princes of Tanis are indeed foolish. As regards the wise ones of Pharaoh’s
counsellors, [their] counsel is something unreasonable. How will You men say to Pharaoh: I am the son of
wise ones, the son of kings of ancient time? Where, then, are they — the wise men of yours — that they
may now tell you and that they may know what Jehovah of armies has counselled concerning Egypt? The
princes of Tanis have acted foolishly, the princes of Memphis have been deceived, the cornerstone [the chiefs,
LXX] of its tribes have caused Egypt to wander about. (Is 19:11-13). The passage, written at the
time of Osorkon IV, could concern this Pharaoh, but the order: How will You men say to
Pharaoh, points out only Israelites, in addition, the word "tribes" usually refers to the tribes
of Israel (Ex 28:21, Nb 4:18), which has puzzled some translators, because the Egyptian
system did not know this kind of division into tribes, contrary to Israelites.
After the death of Joseph, as Hebrew people greatly increased (Ex 1:7), the viziers
of the North received new responsibilities and became in fact co-regents (beginning of the
15th Dynasty). It can be seen there is no more vizier after Sobekhotep IV (1686-1677), a
king of the 13th Dynasty, until Ahmose329 (1530-1505), first king of the 18th Dynasty. Thus,
Moses was born during the 15th dynasty: She conceived and gave birth to a son. When she saw how
good-looking he was, she kept him concealed for 3 months (...) Now Pharaoh's daughter went down to
bathe in the Nile river, while her maids walked along the riverside. Among the reeds she noticed the basket,
and she sent her maid to fetch it. She opened it and saw the child: the baby was crying. Feeling sorry for it,
she said: This is one of the little Hebrews. The child's sister then said to Pharaoh's daughter: Shall I go
and find you a nurse among the Hebrew women to nurse the child for you? Yes, said Pharaoh's daughter,
and the girl went and called the child's own mother. Pharaoh's daughter said to her: Take this child away
and nurse it for me. I shall pay you myself for doing so. So the woman took the child away and nursed it.
When the child grew up, she brought him to Pharaoh's daughter who treated him like a son; she named
him Moses because, she said: I drew him out of the water (Ex 2:2-10). As Pharaoh's daughter was
not able to speak Hebrew, the name Moses must be Egyptian. One can notice that in
Hebrew this name probably means "pulled out (mosheh)" (the word "water" is missing),
N. GRIMAL - Histoire de l'Égypte ancienne
Paris 1988 Éd. Fayard p. 212.
329 M. DESSOUDEIX – Chronique de l'Égypte ancienne
Paris 2008 Éd. Actes Sud pp. 728-732.
328
103
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
104
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
whereas in Egyptian it means "Water's son (mu-sa)". Moses did not receive this Egyptian
name from his parents, but from Pharaoh's daughter after his "baptism" in the Nile. As it
was received after the age of 3 months (the text of Exodus 2:10 even suggests after his
weaning), it was therefore a nickname and not a birth name (just as Israel is the nickname
for Jacob, his birth name). The name of Hebrew children was given by parents based on a
noteworthy event at birth. As Moses was beautiful at his birth, which is emphasized by
biblical texts (Ex 2:2) as by Josephus (Jewish Antiquities II:231), "divinely beautiful"
according to Acts 7:20, he had to be called "very beautiful". In Hebrew "beautiful" is
rendered as Ioppa (Jos 19:46) and "splendid" as iepepiah (Jr 46:20).
Moses was adopted as the king's son through Pharaoh's daughter (Ex 2:10).
Adoption in the royal family conferred its holder the honorific title of "king's son." If the
daughter of Pharaoh had the more prestigious position of "Wife of the god", she was able
to confer dynastic position to his son who could be considered not just as king, as were
already the kings of the 15th Dynasty, but as a real co-regent. Some Egyptian accounts show
that women of royal origin could play an important role in the choice of future pharaohs.
According to Flavius Josephus: Thermuthis therefore perceiving him to be so remarkable a child,
adopted him for her son, having no child of her own. And when one time had carried Moses to her father,
she showed him to him, and said she thought to make him her successor, if it should please God she should
have no legitimate child of her own; and to him: I have brought up a child who is of a divine form, and of a
generous mind; and as I have received him from the bounty of the river, in, I thought proper to adopt him
my son, and the heir of thy kingdom. And she had said this, she put the infant into her father's hands: so
he took him, and hugged him to his breast; and on his daughter's account, in a pleasant way, put his
diadem upon his head; but Moses threw it down to the ground, and, in a puerile mood, he wreathed it
round, and trod upon his feet, which seemed to bring along with evil presage concerning the kingdom of
Egypt. But when the sacred scribe saw this, (he was the person who foretold that his nativity would the
dominion of that kingdom low,) he made a violent attempt to kill him; and crying out in a frightful manner,
he said: This, O king! this child is he of whom God foretold, that if we kill him we shall be in no danger;
he himself affords an attestation to the prediction of the same thing, by his trampling upon thy government,
and treading upon thy diadem. Take him, therefore, out of the way, and deliver the Egyptians from the fear
they are in about him; and deprive the Hebrews of the hope they have of being encouraged by him. But
Thermuthis prevented him, and snatched the child away. And the king was not hasty to slay him, God
himself, whose providence protected Moses, inclining the king to spare him. He was, therefore, educated with
great care (Jewish Antiquities II:232-233). The text of Josephus on the royal status of Moses
is often considered a legend by archaeologists although these details were known from 280
BCE thanks to Manetho. Strabo, a Greek geographer and historian, wrote for example
around 20 CE: An Egyptian priest named Moses, who possessed [managed] a portion of the country
called the Lower [Egypt]330, being dissatisfied with the established institutions there, left it and came to
Judea with a large body of people who worshipped the Divinity (Geography XVI:2:35).
The biblical text speaks little of the royal position of Moses during the first 40 years
of his life, but one can guess implicitly in the following texts: The man Moses too was very great
in the land of Egypt, in the eyes of Pharaoh’s servants and in the eyes of the people (Ex 11:3); the daughter
of Pharaoh picked him up and brought him up as her own son. Consequently Moses was instructed in all
the wisdom of the Egyptians. In fact, he was powerful in his words and deeds (Ac 7:21-22); By faith
Moses, when grown up, denied to be called the son of the daughter of Pharaoh, choosing to be ill-treated with
the people of God rather than to have the temporary enjoyment of sin, because he esteemed the reproach of
the Christ as riches greater than the treasures of Egypt (Heb 11:24-26). Renunciation of Moses of
the treasures of Egypt makes sense only if he really had them thanks to his royal status.
Something can be denied only if it has been owned. However, his leading position has been
330
Μωσῆς γάρ τις τῶν Αἰγυπτίων ἱερέων ἔχων τι μέρος τῆς {κάτω} καλουμένης χώρας.
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
challenged by some Hebrews: he (Moses) went out on the following day and here there were two
Hebrew men struggling with each other. So he said to the one in the wrong: Why should you strike your
companion? At this he said: Who appointed you as a prince and judge over us? Are you intending to kill
me just as you killed the Egyptian? (Ex 2:13-14). As Moses could inflict the death penalty on
the Hebrews, that implies his royal authority.
Moses was co-regent for 40 years, from 1613 to 1573 BCE, for exactly the same
duration as Apopi, then: Now when the time of his 40th year was being fulfilled, it came into his heart
to make an inspection of his brothers, the sons of Israel (Ac 7:23). Now it came about in those days, as
Moses was becoming strong, that he went out to his brothers that he might look at the burdens they were
bearing; and he caught sight of a certain Egyptian striking a certain Hebrew of his brothers. So he turned
this way and that and saw there was nobody in sight. Then he struck the Egyptian down and hid him in
the sand (...) Moses now got afraid and said: Surely the thing has become known! Subsequently Pharaoh
got to hear of this thing, and he attempted to kill Moses; but Moses ran away from Pharaoh that he might
dwell in the land of Madian; and he took a seat by a well (Ex 2:11, 15). About this new period of
40 years (1573-1533), since Moses lived 120 years (Dt 34:7) and spent 40 years in the
wilderness (Dt 8:2), very little is known. One can assume that Moses was well known at
that time under his birth name Apopi (or under his last enthronement name Aauserre).
Thus, to avoid being recognized he had to hide his identity and probably used his
‘baptismal’ name Musa unknown outside Egypt, Hebraized into Muša (for example, the
name Amen-mes is rendered Aman-maša in the Akkadian El-Amarna letter n° 113). We
note that after King Apopi, the last great Hyksos, the following Hyksos dynasty changed its
capital, Edfu, north of Thebes (centre of the war of liberation against the Hyksos)331,
instead of Avaris and that all kings of this 16th dynasty bore only Egyptian names. During
this long period the king of Egypt died. The Israelites, groaning in their servitude, cried out for help and
from the depths of their servitude their cry came up to God (Ex 2:23).
The last 40 years of Moses (1533-1493) are the best known: you and the elders of Israel
are to go to the king of Egypt and say to him: Jehovah, the God of the Hebrews, has encountered us. So
now please allow us to make a 3-days' journey into the desert and sacrifice to Jehovah our God. I am well
aware that the king of Egypt will not let you go unless he is compelled by a mighty hand; he will not let you
go until I have stretched out my arm and struck Egypt with all the wonders I intend to work there. I shall
ensure that the Egyptians are so much impressed with this people that when you go, you will not go emptyhanded. Every woman will ask her neighbour and the woman staying in her house for silver and golden
jewellery, and clothing. In these you will dress your own sons and daughters, despoiling the Egyptians of
them (...) So Moses took his wife and his son and, putting them on a donkey, started back for Egypt (...)
[God said:] You will then say to Pharaoh: (Ex 3:16-22; 4:20-22). The fact that Moses could easily
go and talk to Pharaoh proved that he was an important figure. However, the context is
complicated because Moses had to discuss with Egyptian officials (17th dynasty) and with
Jewish officers (16th dynasty) totally subservient to Pharaoh: So those who drove the people to
work and their officers [16th Dynasty] went out and said to the people: Here is what Pharaoh has said: I
am giving You no more straw. You yourselves go, get straw for yourselves wherever You may find it, because
there is to be no reducing of Your services one bit. Consequently the people scattered about over all the land
of Egypt to gather stubble for straw. And those who drove them to work kept urging them, saying: Finish
Your works, each one his work, day for day, just as when straw was available. Later on the officers of the
sons of Israel [16th Dynasty], whom Pharaoh’s taskmasters [17th Dynasty] had set over them, were beaten,
these saying: Why is it You did not finish Your prescribed task in making bricks as formerly, both
yesterday and today? Consequently the officers of the sons of Israel [16th Dynasty] went in and began to cry
out to Pharaoh, saying: Why do you deal this way with your servants? There is no straw given to your
E.D. OREN - The Hyksos Enygma — Introductory Overview
in: The Hyksos: New Historical and Archaeological Perspectives (Philadelphia 1997) p. 12
331
105
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
106
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
servants and yet they are saying to us: ‘Make bricks!’ and here your servants are beaten, whereas your own
people are at fault. But he said: You are relaxing, You are relaxing! That is why You are saying: We
want to go, we want to sacrifice to Jehovah. And now go, serve! Though no straw will be given to You, yet
You are to give the fixed amount of bricks. Then the officers of the sons of Israel [16th Dynasty] saw
themselves in an evil plight at the saying: You must not deduct from Your bricks one bit of anyone’s daily
rate. After that they encountered Moses [former king of the 15th Dynasty] and Aaron, who were standing
there to meet them as they came out from Pharaoh. At once they said to them: May Jehovah look upon You
and judge, since You have made us smell offensive before Pharaoh [17th Dynasty] and before his servants so
as to put a sword in their hand to kill us (Ex 5:10-21).
Some Jewish officers of the 16th Dynasty refused to cooperate with Moses and even
opposed him: Now in the way that Jannes and Jambres resisted Moses, so these also go on resisting the
truth, men completely corrupted in mind, disapproved as regards the faith (2Tm 3:8). The precision: «
disapproved as regards the faith » proves that they were Jewish rulers332, not Egyptian
priests. According to the Jewish literature of the 1st century, Jannes and his brother Jambres
elial
opposed Moses under the influence of Belial (Damascus
Document 5:18-19). According to Manetho, Jannas ruledtho,
as
king after Apopi, which is unlikely because his Egyptian
me
name, Jeneses deputy (y-n-s-s idn), appears (opposite figure) an
in
333
an inscription at Avaris not as king of Lower Egypt but
an,
only as Khyan’s son, the Hyksos king (15th Dynasty) just before Apopi.
The episode of the 10 plagues of Egypt is famous. A painstaking reconstruction334
shows that it lasted about 40 days, from month XII day 1 to month I day 14 (1533 BCE),
the most lethal wounds (9th and 10th) being focused on the last 3 days, with total darkness,
storm and death of all the firstborn:
N°
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Date
7/XII
15/XII
18/XII
20/XII
23/XII
25/XII
27/XII
28/XII
2/I
5/I
10/I
14/I
30/I
Julian
March 18
March 26
March 29
March 31
April 3
April 5
April 7
April 8
April 12
April 13
April 20
April 24
May 10
Plague
Water to blood
Frogs
Lice
Flies
Murrain
Boils
Hail and Fire
Barley and flax smitten
Locust
Darkness for 3 days
Passover, lamb selected
Passover, death of firstborns
Death of Pharaoh
Exodus
7:14-25
8:1-7
8:16-19
8:24-29
9:6
9:8-12
9:22-26
9:31
10:13-15
10:21-23
12:28
12:29-36
14:7-28
Adominitions Tempest stela
2:6,10
yes?
2:10-11
6:2-4
yes
9:11; 10:1
yes
2:6-7; 5:6-7
yes
Total solar eclipse
According to the biblical text: And at midnight Jehovah struck down all the first-born in
Egypt from the first-born of Pharaoh, heir to his throne, to the first-born of the prisoner in the dungeon, and
the first-born of all the livestock. Pharaoh and all his officials and all the Egyptians got up in the night,
and there was great wailing in Egypt, for there was not a house without its dead. It was still dark when
Pharaoh summoned Moses and Aaron and said: Up, leave my subjects, you and the Israelites! Go and
worship Jehovah as you have asked (Ex 12:29-31). The remark: from the first-born of Pharaoh, heir to
his throne, shows that this anonymous Pharaoh had a son (the eldest) who was Crown
prince. The final sequence of events is precisely dated.
According to Pliny the Elder (c. 77 CE): There is another sect, also, of adepts in the magic art, who derive their origin from Moses, Jannes, and
Lotapea, Jews by birth, but many thousand years posterior to Zoroaster (The Natural History XXX:2).
333 M. BIETAK - Avaris the Capital of the Hyksos
London 1996 Ed. British Museum Press pp. 64-67.
334 F. NOLEN JONES – The Chronology of the Old Testament
Texas 2005 Ed. Master Books p. 70.
332
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
The Exodus began on 15/I (1533 BCE) from Rameses a storage city (unidentified),
which was the ancient Egyptian Babylon (Fustat, near Old Cairo) according to Josephus
(Jewish Antiquities II:315). Israelites followed the path of the desert (from Memphis to the
mines of Serabit el-Khadim) and not the Philistines' way335, called “path of Horus” by the
Egyptians, along the Mediterranean coast to a camp at Soukkhot, then Etham before finally
returning to Pihahiroth336 (Ex 13:17-14:2). This town was to be located north of the Red
Sea as described by Josephus (Jewish Antiquities II:324-326) and could be the present jebel
'Ataqa (the site actually looks like a dead end). The pharaoh died during the crossing of the
Red Sea337 (Ps 136:15), and the Israelites reached Elim (now called Gharandel wadi) on the
15th of the following month (Exodus 16:1). The route between Memphis and Elim is round
600 kilometres. The distance can be covered in approximately 24 days (the armies of the
past moved at an average speed to 25 km per day. Even the Roman armies, highly
organized, did not exceed this speed)338, which corresponds to 30 days indicated in the text
(taking into account the duration of each stay)339. Crossing the current between the
promontory called Ras ‘Ataqa to the oasis Ayun Musa, on the opposite bank is about 10
km which requires a period of at least 2 hours to get from the bottom of one bank to
another. The maximum depth is 15 meters in the middle of the path, which is consistent
with the biblical description: The Israelites went on dry ground right through the sea, with walls of
water to right and left of them (Ex 14:22). To avoid miraculous explanation some biblical
scholars propose a simple swamps crossing, but in this case the path would be either
impractical for a large crowd or without danger for the Egyptian armies.
The departure from Egypt is dated 15 Nisan (Nb 33:3). Since the arrival in the
desert of Sin is dated the 15th of the following month (Ex 16:1) and the final showdown is
near Pihahiroth (Ex 14:9) a place halfway between the city called Rameses and the desert of
Sin, the date marking the death of the Pharaoh can be fixed Nisan 30/1 Iyyar, on 9/10 May
1533 BCE. Flavius Josephus gives some chronological details on this important event: a
thick darkness, without the least light, spread itself over the Egyptians, whereby their sight being obstructed,
and their breathing hindered by the thickness of the air, they died miserably, and under a terror lest they
should be swallowed up by the dark cloud. Besides this, when the darkness, after 3 days and as many
nights, was dissipated, (...) But when God had signified, that with one plague he would compel the
Egyptians to let Hebrews go, he commanded Moses to tell the people that they should have a sacrifice ready,
and they should prepare themselves on the 10th day of the month Xanthicus, against the 14th, (which month
is called by the Egyptians Pharmouthi, Nisan by the Hebrews; but the Macedonians call it Xanthicus,)
and that he should carry the Hebrews with all they had (...) the whole Egyptian army was within it, the sea
flowed to its own place, and came down with a torrent raised by storms of wind, and encompassed the
Egyptians. Showers of rain also came down from the sky, and dreadful thunders and lightning, with flashes
of fire. Thunderbolts also were darted upon them. Nor was there any thing which used to be sent by God
upon men, as indications of his wrath, which did not happen at this time, for a dark and dismal night
oppressed them. And thus did all these men perish, so that there was not one man left to be a messenger of
this calamity to the rest of the Egyptians (Jewish Antiquities II:308-311,343-344). The
equivalence: 1st Pharmouthi (IV Peret 1) = 1st Nisan, is possible only around 1530 BCE.
The ‘dark and dismal night’ that occurred on April 14 was a total solar eclipse.
335 It seems that if the Israelites had taken the path of Horus in the open, they could easily return to Egypt in seeing the army of Pharaoh
pursuing them.
336 Pihahiroth name could come from old Canaanite pi ḫirîtu "mouth of the channel."
337 It is in fact the old Sea of Reeds north of the Red Sea because the Greek text (Ac 7:36, Heb 11:29) always translates the Hebrew
words yam-suph "Sea of Reeds" by erythra thalassa "Red Sea".
338 E. LUTTWAK – La grande stratégie de l'Empire romain
Paris 2009 Éd. Economica pp. 137.
339 Departure from Ramses (near Memphis) on Nisan 15, arrival at Succoth on 21, departure on 23, arrival at Etham on 27, departure on
29, arrival at Pihahiroth on 30, departure on 1 next month, arrival at Mara on 8 and departure on 13, arrived at Elim on 15.
107
108
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
The total solar eclipse on 15/II was merged with the violent storm that occurred at
the same time: The waters have seen you, O God, the waters have seen you; they began to be in severe
pains. Also, the watery deeps began to be agitated. The clouds have thunderously poured down water; A
sound the cloudy skies have given forth. Also, your own arrows proceeded to go here and there. The sound of
your thunder was like chariot wheels; Lightnings have lighted up the productive land; The earth became
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
agitated and began to rock. Through the sea your way was, and your path was through many waters; And
your very footprints have not come to be known. You have led your people just like a flock, by the hand of
Moses and Aaron (Ps 77:17-20). The text of Ezekiel mentions the tragic end of a pharaoh
and associates it with a cloudy sky and a solar eclipse: Son of man, lift up a dirge concerning
Pharaoh the king of Egypt, and you must say to him: As a maned young lion of nations you have been
silenced. And you have been like the marine monster in the seas [crocodile], and you kept gushing in your
rivers and kept muddying the waters with your feet and fouling their rivers (...) And when you get
extinguished I will cover [the] heavens and darken their stars. As for [the] sun, with clouds I shall cover it,
and [the] moon itself will not let its light shine. All the luminaries of light in the heavens — I shall darken
them on your account, and I will put darkness upon your land (Ezk 32:2, 7-8). This text targets the
Pharaoh of the Exodus, the only one known for ending tragically (Ps 136:15), because the
terms "crocodile dragon/ marine monster" always refer to this ruder (Is 51:9-10) as an
avatar of the sliding snake, Leviathan (Is 27:1, Ezk 29:2-5, Ps 74:13-14) and not Apries, the
Pharaoh of that time who is named (Jr 44:30). This process of assimilation between two
rulers from different eras is found again with the king of Tyre who was assimilated to the
original serpent in Eden (Ezk 28:12-14). The expression: All the luminaries of light in the
heavens — I shall darken them on your account, and I will put darkness upon your land has a symbolic
meaning, but could be understood only if it had also a literal meaning. The Pharaoh was
considered a living god by the Egyptians, the son of Ra the sun god, thus the solar eclipse
as the moonless night had to mark them.
According to astronomy, the only total solar eclipse in this region during this period
1600-1500340 was the one dated May 10, 1533 BCE341, magnitude 1.08, it covered a strip of
250 km and was visible in the North of Egypt over several cities like Heliopolis (dedicated
to sun worship), Memphis and Heracleopolis, at 4:40 p.m. and lasted more than 6 minutes
(the place called Pihahiroth "mouth of the canal" should be near As Suways).
Chronological information from the biblical text (the death of Pharaoh dated May
10, 1533 BCE), from Josephus (14 Nisan = 14 Pharmouthi around 1530 BCE), from the
Rhind papyrus (Avaris evacuated during I Shemu 1533 BCE) and from astronomy (total
solar eclipse on May 10, 1533 BCE) coincide remarkably well:
340
341
http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/SEcat5/SE-1599--1500.html
http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/SEsearch/SEsearchmap.php?Ecl=-15320510
109
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
110
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
Israelite calendar
23 Adar (23/XII)
1 Nisan ( 1/I)
14 Nisan (14/I)
15 Nisan (15/I)
30 Nisan (30/I)
29 Iyyar (29/II)
Julian (1533 BCE)
3 April (spring equinox)
11 April
24 April (full moon)
25 April
10 May (total solar eclipse)
7 June
2 October
Egyptian calendar
III Peret 26 (26 Phamenoth)
IV Peret 4 ( 4 Pharmouthi)
IV Peret 17 (17 Pharmouthi)
IV Peret 18 (18 Pharmouthi)
I Shemu 3 ( 3 Pakhons)
II Shemu 1 ( 1 Payni)
I Akhet 23 (23 Thot)
Event
Death of Ahmose Sapaïr
Avaris evacuated, then sacked
Death of Seqenenre Taa
[Kamose] arrived in Heliopolis
Tjaru sacked by Kamose
Events
following
the
exodus from Egypt are few.
According to the biblical text, due
to a lack of faith, entry into
Canaan, which should have started
from year 2 (Nb 1:1) was delayed
40 years (Nb 14:29-34). Some
Israelites tried entering the land of
Canaan despite the divine refusal,
but they were defeated by the
Amalekites in the south of
Palestine (Nb 14:34-45), probably
in the Hyksos area near Sharuhen
(Tell el-‘Ajjul).
There is no consensus whatever as to the function(s) of scarab seals, however it
seems reasonable to assume that the demonstrable cultural intimacy between southern
Levantine city-states such as Pella or Sharuhen and the Hyksos Kingdom grew on the back
of a flourishing economic relationship342.
Year
-1534 8
-1533
-1532
9
10
11
12
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
[A]
V
VI
VII
VIII
IX
X
XI
XII
I
II
III
IV
V
VI
VII
VIII
IX
X
XI
XII
I
II
III
IV
V
VI
VII
VIII
IX
XII
I
II
III
IV
V
VI
VII
VIII
IX
X
XI
XII
I
II
III
IV
V
VI
VII
VIII
IX
X
XI
XII
I
II
III
IV
[B]
[C]
79
80
[A] Pharaoh [Seqenenre]
[B] Crown Prince [Ahmose Sapaïr]
[C] Moses was 80 years old when he came into Egypt. He
was a former pharaoh 40 years earlier.
0
Beginning of the 10 plagues
1
(1)
[B] Death of the Crown Prince (who was a first-born)
[A] Death of the Pharaoh
[B] Prince of Thebes [Kamose]
(2)
[C] Year 1 of the Exodus (departure to Palestine)
11
***
***
(1)
2
(2)
***
[C] Year 2 of the Exodus
Israelites defeated by the Amalekites in the south of
Palestine. Exodus for 40 years in Sinai (Egypt)
(3)
S.J. BOURKE, K.O. ERIKSSON – Pella in Jordan, Royal Name Scarabs and the Hyksos Empire
in: Timelines Studies in Honour of Manfred Bietak Vol. II (2006) pp. 339-348.
342
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
111
WHAT WAS THE LANGUAGE SPOKEN BY THE HYKSOS?
The name of two Hyksos kings: Yaqub-Baal (y-‘-q-b-‘-r) or Yaqub-El (y-‘-q-b-i-r in
Thutmose III's list), are clearly Old Canaanite (or Old Hebrew), however this ancient
language is poorly known because of the very few number of documents. In addition, some
words believed to be recent, because of their apparent absence in ancient documents
(several examples arisen)343, existed in fact for many centuries, but had “hibernated344”. Old
Canaanite could be very old as Unas' pyramid already contains, toward 2300 BCE, some
sentences in this language written phonetically with hieroglyphs345. The fact that Egyptians
borrowed Canaanite words proves that there were many Canaanite inhabitants in Egypt
from the remotest antiquity. For example, the words migdol “tower” (Ex 14:2) and ’ašpah
“quiver” (Job 29:23), vocalized magdalu and ašipati in old Canaanite (letters EA 234, 266),
were borrowed as miktal and ’aspet by the Egyptians around 1800 BCE346.
It is noteworthy that the word manna “what? (Ex 16:15)” is different from Hebrew
mâ-hu “what it [is]” thus some scholars have explained this discrepancy by a popular
etymology based on the Syriac or late Aramaic. This erudite explanation is inaccurate
because the word manna means “who” in both languages, not “what”. The form of the
interrogative pronouns in ancient Semitic languages347, is:
Language attested
Old Egyptian
Old Akkadian
Assyro-Babylonian
Amorite
Ugaritic
Old Canaanite (Old Hebrew)
Phoenician
Hebrew
Aramaic
Syriac
from
-2500
-2500
-1900
-2500
-1500
-1800
-1000
-1000
-900
0
until
-1500
-2000
-600
-1500
-1100
-1100
300
500
200
200
“who”
m
man
mannu(m)
manna
my
miya
my
mî[y]
man
man
“what”
m
min
mînu(m)
ma
mh, mn
manna
m
mâ[n]
mâ
mâ
“tower”
m(i)-k-ti-l
“quiver”
’i-s-p-t
magdala
išpatu(m)
mgdl
magdalu
utpt
ašipati
migdol
’ašpah
The word manna existed in Old Canaanite and meant “what”, it is written ma-an-na
(vocalization preserved by the Septuagint and the New Testament) in a letter dated around
1350 BCE found in El-Amarna (EA 286). Old Canaanite is a kind of Old Hebrew tinged
with Akkadian348 (Old Canaanite lexicon with a Babylonian grammar), which was used by
scribes (Semites) in their correspondence with Canaan (Old Canaanite gave way to Hebrew
after 1100 BCE). The word ḥanikayw “his men of elite” in Genesis 14:14 is another
example proving the great antiquity of Old Hebrew. This hapax, the exact meaning of
which was not yet known long ago, was discovered in some Egyptian execration texts
dated 1900-1800 BCE to qualify “men of elite” who belonged to Canaanite rulers. This rare
word349 appears then for the last time, in a text found at Taanach dated around 1450 BCE.
A.R. MILLARD - The Tell Fekheriyeh Inscriptions
in: Biblical Archaeology Today 1990. Jerusalem 1993, Ed. Israel Exploration Society p. 523
A.R. MILLARD - A Lexical Illusion
in: Journal of Semitic Studies 31 (1986) pp. 1-3.
344 For example, the rare and "recent" word ketem "gold" (Job 28:16,19), already existed in Akkadian (kutîmu) from the Sumerian KUDIM which meant "goldsmith" (prior 2000 BCE).
345 R.C. STEINER – Early Northwest Semitic Serpent Spells in the Pyramid Texts
in: Harvard Semitic Studies 61. Indiana 2011, pp. 77-84.
346 J. SEGUIN – Le Migdol du Proche-Orient à l'Égypte
Paris 2007 Éd. Presses de l'Université Paris-Sorbonne pp. 28-30,149.
347 E. LIPINSKI - Semitic Languages Outline of a Comparative Grammar
in: Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 80. Leuven 2001 Ed. Peeters pp. 336,337,560,575.
348 S. IZRE'EL - Canaano-Akkadian
Munich 2005 Ed. Licom Europa pp. 1-4.
349 R. DE VAUX - Histoire ancienne d'Israël des origines à l'installation en Canaan
Paris 1986 Éd. Gabalda pp. 208-209.
343
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
112
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
In the 18th Dynasty, the Egyptians established administrative headquarters in three
provinces of Syria-Palestine and built garrisons throughout the region. Furthermore a large
numbers of Semitic speakers were living in Egypt as slaves or as labourers; some were sent
there for diplomatic reasons. Another form of contact was commercial, and Syrian
merchants, private and state envoys, brought in goods and slaves to sell in Egyptian
market-places. Through their intensified use of the overland trade routes, the Egyptians no
doubt interacted with peoples living in the region from the Sinai Peninsula to the Arabah.
The execration texts of the Middle Kingdom record quite a number of Canaanite personal
and place names, but examples of ordinary vocabulary are not numerous until the New
Kingdom350 (c. 1530 BCE). Usually a people borrows certain words from immigrants
according to the number of these immigrants in the country351. Given that the Egyptians
were several millions around 1500 BCE and they had borrowed several dozens of
Canaanite words, it means that the Hyksos had have been numerous, likely at least
1,000,000 (in addition Seqenenre Taa was not able to expel them), in order to produce such
an influence on Egyptian language. This figure is in agreement with that from the Bible,
which gives a number of 600,000 men before the Exodus (Ex 12:37).
Old Canaanite (or Old Hebrew) as Semitic language could be written thanks to
cuneiform or hieroglyphs, but equivalence of sounds being imperfect in the first case and
cursive writing being difficult in the second case (even in hieratic), a new writing more
adapted was born at Serabit el-Khadim during the 15th Dynasty352. Several inscriptions in
proto-Canaanite have been discovered in Egypt (Serabit el-Khadim in Sinai and Wadi el353
Ḥôl
north of Thebes) and in Palestine (Lachish, Gezer and Shechem). These inscriptions
are difficult to date, between 1850 and 1500 BCE for Serabit el-Khadim and 1600-1500 for
those in Palestine but the oldest epigraphs in paleo-Hebrew are dated around 1500 BCE354.
The inscription contains an Egyptian hieroglyphic text: « Beloved by Hathor of [the
mistress of] turquoise (mry ḥtḥr [nbt] mfk3t) », and two proto-Canaanite texts: « Beloved by
the Mistress (m’hb‘l[t]) » and « to the Mistress (lb‘lt) ». The inscriptions from Palestine seem
to have only proper names: Kaleb? (Lachish); Ṭuranza? (Gezer).
J.E. HOCH – Semitic Words in Egyptian Texts of the New Kingdom and Third Intermediate Period
Princeton 1994, Ed. Princeton University Press pp. 3-5.
351 That's why the American language borrowed more Spanish words, coming from the Mexicans, than Swedish or Norwegian words.
352 A. LEMAIRE – Les «Hyksos» et les débuts de l'écriture alphabétique au Proche-Orient
in: Des signes pictographiques à l'alphabet (Karthala, 2000), pp.103-133.
353 J. COLEMAN DARNELL, F.W. DOBBS-ALLSOPP, M.J. LUNDBERG, P. KYLE MCCARTER, B. ZUCKERMAN – Two Early Alphabetic
Inscriptions from the Wadi el-Ḥôl in: The Annual of the American Schools of Oriental Research 59 (2005), pp. 73-110.
354 S. DALLEY – Babylonian Tablets from the First Sealand Dynasty in the Schøyen Collection
in: Cornell University Studies in Assyriology and Sumerology Vol. 9 (CDL Press, 2009) pp. 1-4.
L. COLONNA D'ISTRIA – Babylonian Tablets from the First Sealand Dynasty in the Schøyen Collection
in: Nouvelles Assyriologiques Brèves et Utilitaires N°3 (2012) pp. 61-63.
350
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
Many Egyptologists dispute the fact that the Hyksos have used the Proto-Sinaitic
because these inscriptions are rare and remain undeciphered for most of them. A main
reason for this anomaly: despite their notable differences, Ancient Semitic languages had
remained close355 (likely until the end of the 2nd millennium BCE) and could be broadly
understood by different speakers as different as Babylonians and Syrians (similarly Jews and
Arabs today) consequently, as Akkadian was the lingua franca at that time there was no great
need to use a local language because from the end of the 3rd millennium the language of
international trade and diplomacy was Akkadian throughout the Orient, with the exception
of the kingdom of Byblos which used Egyptian. Thus the great Syrian city of Ebla (c. 2300
BCE) had used Akkadian with the Sumerian kingdoms, as well as the city of Mari, similarly
the Assyrian merchants of Ashur with the Hittite kingdom of Kanish (c. 1900 BCE).
The Hyksos Absa[r] “Father of prince” who came from Edom356 and who met
Senwosret II (in 1858 BCE) in order to trade an amount of black eye-paint, had to have
talked in Egyptian, but when Sinuhe, an Egyptian prince, admonished Amusinenshi, a local
chieftain somewhere in Syria (Upper Retenu) with whom he resided while in exile, to write
to Senwosret I (1946-1901), he had to have talked in Akkadian. Although the Canaanites
spoke Old Canaanite language (obviously), those of the south, in Palestine (Lower Retenu),
had to do their business in the Egyptian language, those of the north, in Syria (Lower
Retenu), had to do their business in Akkadian. Consequently, writing in Old Canaanite was
used very sporadically, sometimes between traders of the same language but from different
regions, such as the Hyksos officers with the group of workers from southern Palestine
who were coming to work in the mines of Serabit el-Khadim.
The excavations at Avaris of the palace of Khyan357, the last Hyksos king who
reigned just before Apopi, have confirmed two points: 1) these kings had connections with
Palestine (Retenu) because a seal unearthed underneath the palace bears the inscription in
Egyptian hieroglyphics (framed area below): Ruler of Retenu-land: Mi?[--] ( ḥq3 Rtnw: Mi?[--]),
2) and inside the palace have been found 8 seals in Khyan's name as well as a clay tablet
(from Palestine) written in late Old Babylonian (cuneiform dated around 1550 BCE).
However, radiocarbon dating at the Tell el-Daba site in the Nile Delta (Avaris) has created
an enigma for many years. Despite great efforts, the difference of about 120 years between
the chronology based on 14C dates and the one based on archaeological evidence linked to
the Egyptian historical chronology has not been solved358.
J.A. HACKETT, N. PAT-EL – On Canaanite and Historical Linguistics : A rejoinder to Anson Rainey
in: Maarav 17 :2 (2010), pp. 173-188.
E. VON DASSOW – Peripheral Akkadian Dialects, or Akkadography of Local Languages?
in: Babel und Bibel 4 Volume I (Eisenbrauns, 2010), pp. 895-924.
356 Edom was still called Shutu[m] by the Egyptians at that time, the famous Sudum area (Sodom).
357 M. BIETAK - Le Hyksos Khayan, son palais et une lettre en cuneiforme
in: Compre Rendu de l'Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres II (2010), pp. 973–990.
M. BIETAK – Où est le palais des Hyksôs ? À propos les fouilles à Tell el-Dab'a et ' Ezbet Helmi
in: Compre Rendu de l'Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres II (2007), pp. 749-780.
358 W. KUTSCHERA & AL – Chronology of Tell el-Daba: 14C Dating, Archaeology, and Egyptology
in: Radiocarbon 54:3–4 (2012), pp 407–422.
355
113
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
114
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
WHAT WAS THE MAIN GOD OF THE HYKSOS?
Proper names are also a valuable source of information about the religion of people
who bear them, because they contain the names of deities who were really worshiped. This
shows that the Hyksos only worshiped Canaanite gods, Baal being the main one. The term
baal is not a proper name, but a Semitic word meaning “Master, Lord, Patron, Owner,
Head [of family]”. Baal was called in fact359: Ada in Ebla, Addu in Mari, Hd in Ugarit, etc360.
This god of Canaan had in practice a local cult, as shown by the expressions: Baal [or
Horus] of Zaphon “Lord of the North”, Baal of Peor “Lord of Peor” (Ex 14:2, Nb 25:5),
etc. Balaam invoked the god of the Israelites on "high places of Baal" (Nb 22:41-23:12) and
David refers to Jehovah as “Lord of Breakings” (2Sa 5:20). Only the worship of Baal was
sentenced but the use of this term to refer to God as Master remained legitimate. Some
Israelites had theophoric names in Baal such as Bealyah “Lord Yah”, Baalyada “Master
knows”, Baalhanan “Lord has favoured” (1Ch 12:5, 14:7, 27:28), etc. However, after the
fall of the kingdom of Samaria (720 BCE), using the term baal “Lord” for God was
banned: You will call me my Husband, and you will no longer call me my Baal (Ho 2:16-18) to avoid
idolatry (Jg 2:13). Copyists even changed the names of Baal in Israelite names, replacing
baal by boshet “shame”, as Jerubbaal into Jerubbeshet and Ishbaal into Ishboshet (1Sa 12:11,
2Sa 2:8, 11:21). The term adon “Lord, Master” remained lawful (Dt 10:17).
Egyptian religion was syncretic, thus it equated systematically Canaanite gods with
Egyptian gods who resembled them. Representations of Seth and Baal are quite similar.
Several seals from Avaris361 show Baal, a Syrian god of lightning, with a sceptre and wearing
a horned helmet with a braid. The two horns appear on the helmet of the “Baal of
lightning” unearthed in Ugarit and dated around -1500 (Baal is presented as the victor of
the sea god Yam). Seth “Master of the Storm” was the Egyptian version of the Baal of
Canaan, so there was a technical equivalence between two terms362 but Hyksos people
worshiped Baal363, not Seth its Egyptian counterpart, because no Hyksos name refers to
Seth. It is noteworthy that a Hyksos king was called Yaqub-Baal (y-‘-q-b-‘-r).
Seth (Egypt)
Baal (Ugarit)
Baal/Seth (Avaris)
E. LIPINSKI - Baal
in: Dictionnaire encyclopédique de la Bible Éd. Brepols 1987 p. 172.
360 Similarly, the Mesopotamian god dIŠKUR could be read either Adad or Addu, Tešub, etc., according to the country.
361 D. COLLON – New Seal Impressions from Tell El-Dab'a
in: Timelines Studies in Honour of Manfred Bietak Vol. II (2006) pp. 97-101.
362 N. ALLON - Seth is Baal — Evidence from the Egyptian Script
in: Ägypten und Levante XVII Wien 1997 pp. 15-22.
363 Moses' mother was Jochebed (Ex 6:20) whom name means "Jo[va] is glory".
359
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
Ramses II employed the two terms interchangeably as shown in his poem364 written
after the Battle of Kadesh: And the vile conquered Prince of Hatti sent a message to honour the name
of my majesty, the equal of Ra, in these terms: You're Sutekh, Baal himself. The fear that you inspire is a
flame in the country of Hatti. In the treaty between Ramses II and Hattusil III one reads: Seth,
whose strength is great (...) see, Hattusil great prince of the Hittites, is party to a treaty to restore relations
had established Ra, that Sutekh established for the land of Egypt and the land of Hatti (...) the lord of the
sky god Ra, the god Reof the city of Arinna, Sutekh lord of heaven, Sutekh of the Hittites, Sutekh of the
city of Arinna. The treaty was sealed for "Seth, ruler of heaven." The character used to Seth
was vocalized Baal (b-‘-r) in some Egyptian inscriptions365:
b ‘ r
Seth
b ‘ r Seth
Ramses III had four divisions of 5000 men including one named Seth and six
chariotries, one of which called Baâlherkhopshef "Baal is on my sword366", which confirms
the similar role of these deities. So when Seqenenre Taa criticized Apopi for exclusively
worshiping Seth, he actually aimed at Baal367.
Despite the great influence of Seth in the political and
religious life of the Ramessides, one knows very ittle
few
dest
figurations in full relief within official sculpture. The oldest
representations368 are those of a dog shape, sometimes with
an
an ass's head (opposite figure)369. The general appearance
is
that
that of a dog, but two elements are also characteristic of the
donkey: the two elongated ears and the tuft of hair at the end
of a long tail (elements of the animal frequently represented).
d).
As storm god, Seth had a destructive aspect, for
example one reads in the Book of the Dead370: I'm Seth,
ance
disturbance agent and a hurricane in the horizon of heaven, as Nebedj
n of
/
[Demon of darkness]. In time that ambivalent aspect
protector/destroyer would increase. Several medical papyri
the
from the beginning of the 18th dynasty suggest invoking eth
the
reat
god Seth who stopped the Mediterranean Sea before Avaris
to treat certain diseases: Conjuration of Canaanite disease: who
wingis
knowing as Ra? (...) So as Seth conjured sea, Seth conjure thee well,(as)
O
Canaan disease (...) all evil in you will be expelled (...) like the seaSeth
by
listening to the voice of Seth (...) Other conjuration. Seth's rageelledis
directed against the disease 'akhu! Seth's fury is directed against you!
ragerage
of the
storm, against
when itthe
is
tion.The
Seth's
is directed
hungry for water from the sky, is directed against you! Then he will end the violence, having [put] his arms
on you. Then shalt thou let endure what the sea has endured through his hand. The "destructive rage of
P. GRANDET – Les pharaons du Nouvel Empire : une pensée stratégique
Paris 2008 Éd. du Rocher pp. 322,343,344.
365 R. GIVEON - Les bédouins Shosou des documents égyptiens
Leiden 1971 Ed. E.J. Brill pp. 51,118.
J.E. HOCH – Semitic Words in Egyptian Texts of the New Kingdom and Third Intermediate Period
Princeton 1994 Ed. Princeton University Press pp. 93-95.
366 P. GRANDET – Ramsès III histoire d'un règne
Paris 2009 Éd. Pygmalion pp. 166, 170.
367 Z. MAYANI – Les Hyksos et le monde de la Bible
Paris 1956 Éd. Payot pp. 122-128.
368 H. TE VELDE – Seth, God of Confusion
1967 Leiden Ed. Brill pp. 7-12.
369 S. DONADONI – Per la morfologia dio Seth
in: Mitteilungen des Deutschen Archäologischen Instituts Abteilung Kairo 57, 1981 pp. 115,122.
370 P. BARGUET - Le livre des morts des anciens Égyptiens XXXIX
Paris 1967 Éd. du Cerf pp. 7,82.
364
115
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
116
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
the sea (as storm?)" was explained by "the rage of Seth371". The downside of Seth appears
more clearly in an Egyptian papyrus dated to 1200 BCE: It's like Seth, the furious, the reptile, the
snake whose bad venom, in its mouth, is flame (...) as what it had committed against Osiris when he (Seth)
made it immersed in the waters of misfortune.
Seth was an ancient Egyptian god since the first
pharaohs372 (from Khasekhemwy the last king of the 2nd
dynasty) put it (with Horus) above their serekh. This god was
worshiped throughout Egypt's history, at least until the time
of Seti and Sethnakht who had it inside their birth names. So
when Seqenenre Taa criticized Apopi for worshipping only
Seth (actually Baal), he reproached him an uncompromising monotheism373 and not a
heresy. According to information from the Egyptian priest Manetho, as reported by
Josephus, the Hyksos resided at Avaris, a city devoted to Typhon/Seth (Against Apion
I:237-238). Typhoon is the Greek name of Seth, according to Diodorus (Historical Library
I:21,88). The Egyptian term netjer (ntr) “god” does not refer to “God”, as in the Bible, but
only the "divine quality" characteristic of all Egyptian gods. This word was used as a title
and did not designate a specific god, because no temple was dedicated to Netjer “God”.
Although the Hyksos had particular religious beliefs, most worshiped Baal, and
spoke a different language (Old Canaanite), they were wholly considered as Egyptians. The
recording of Hyksos dynasties in Egyptian annals proves it (whereas the name of several
Egyptian kings, considered later as illegitimate, were hammered). No incidents or animosity
toward Egyptian authorities are reported before the so-called Hyksos' war. To sum up, the
Hyksos were viewed as Egyptians who were worshipping Canaanite gods whose the main
one was Baal374 “the Lord”. It is noteworthy that Apopi is the founder of monotheism
since he worshipped solely his “Lord (baal)”. Although syncretism was widely spread in the
past, Egyptians, Canaanites and the Hyksos who had arrived in Canaan after their leaving
Egypt (and their stay in Sinai), did not express in exactly the same way when they were
speaking of God as shown in a letter exhumed in Taanach375 and dated around 1450 BCE.
P. COLLOMBERT, L. COULON - Les dieux contre la mer
in: Bulletin de l'Institut Français d'Archéologie Orientale 100 (2000) p.207.
372 J. VERCOUTER – L'Egypte et la vallée du Nil Tome 1
Paris 1992 Éd. Presses universitaires de France pp. 205-233.
373 O. GOLDWASSER – King Apophis and the Emergence of Monotheism
in: Timelines Studies in Honour of Manfred Bietak Vol. I (2006) pp. 129-133, 331-354.
374 The presence of multiple Baal-named deities with geographic last names is not evidence of polytheism, see S.L. ALLEN - The
Splintered Divine: A Study of Ištar, Baal, and Yahweh Divine Names and Divine Multiplicity in the Ancient Near East (PhD thesis,
University of Pennsylvania, 5-16-2011), pp. 400-410.
375 W. HOROWITZ, T. OSHIMA, S. SANDERS – Cuneiform in Canaan. Cuneiform Sources from the Land of Israel in Ancient Times
Jerusalem 2006 Ed. Israel Exploration Society. The Hebrew University of Jerusalem pp. 132-134, 218
371
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
Recto (left) 6 first lines (Taanach 2 letter):
1) a-na mTal-wa-šur [q]í-bí
To Talwashur say
m
2) um-ma Aḫ-ia-mi ba‘alu ilānu
Message of Ahiami: May the Lord God
3) ZI-ka lí-iṣ-ṣur aḫu at-ta
guard your life. You are a brother
4) ù na-ra-mu i-na aš-ri šu-wa-at
and a beloved friend in that place.
5) ù i-na ŠA-bi-ka i-nu-ma
Now, it is in your mind that
6) ar-ba-ku i-na É ra-qí
I have entered into an “empty house”
13) ša-ni-tam pí-qí-id a-na URU.DIDLI.ḪÁ-ka Furthermore, command your cities
14) ù lu-ú ti-pu-šu ip-ša-šu/-nu
that they should do their work
15) UGU SAG.DU-ia ma-am-ma-an
On my head is everything
16) ša it-tab-su a-na URU.KI.DIDLI.ḪÁ
which took place in regard to the cities.
Verso (right) 4 last lines:
21) ša-ni-tam li-ru-ba-am mIlu-ra-pi-i
Furthermore, let Elrapî enter
22) a-na URU Ra-ḫa-bi ù lu-ù
into Rehob and I will certainly
send my man to you
23) i-wa-ši-ra awilu-ia a-na maḫ-ri-ka
and I will certainly arrange a marriage.
24) ù lu-ù i-pu-šu ḫa-at-nu-tam
Talwashur was the local Cananite ruler of Taanach at that time in association with
Ahiami (lines 13-16). Taanach (modern Tell Ta‘annek) is 8 km South-East of Megiddo.
According to the Old Testament, under the command of Joshua, the Israelites defeated the
king of Taanach around 1490 BCE (Jos 12:7,21) but the Manassites failed to drive out the
Canaanites from this and other cities. Eventually these Canaanites were put to forced
labour (Jg 1:27-28). Given that Taanach is mentioned in the account of the Battle of
Megiddo by Pharaoh Thutmose III, dated Year 23 (1450 BCE), as a southern bypass to
Megiddo and as a place where Egyptian troops were mustered, the Egyptian governor of
Gaza who had come from Egypt, called Amanhatpa in Taanach letters, had to have been
the crown prince Amenhotep (Thutmose III's son).
Taanach letters show two important points: 1) these letters between Canaanite and
Egyptian rulers are all written in Babylonian cuneiform but never in Egyptian hieroglyphs,
nor in Proto-Canaanite; 2) god’s concept was different for Egyptians, Canaanites and
former Hyksos. For example, Guli-Adad, a Canaanite mayor, sent a letter: To Talwashur say:
Thus says Guli-Adad: Live well! May the gods (ilâni) attend to your welfare, the welfare of your house,
and your sons (Taanach 1, lines 1-5), but Amenhotep wrote: To Talwashur say: Thus says
Amanhapta: May Ba’al guard your wife. Send me yours brothers together with the chariots and send me
the horse, your tribute and an audience gift, and all the prisoners who are now with you (Taanach 5, lines
1-12) and Ahiami wrote: To Talwashur say: Message of Ahiami: May the Lord God (ba‘alu ilānu)
guard your life. You are a brother and a beloved friend in that place (T2, lines 1-4). The phrase: May
Ba’al guard your wife is odd coming from an Egyptian ruler but Amenhotep II (1418-1392)
was the first to venerate the Canaanite deities such as: Astarte, Baal and Reshef376.
Ahiami and Elrapî had to have been former Hyksos because these two names are
typically Israelite377 and they do not appear in the letters of Amarna, but above all the
expression “the Lord God”, which is plural with a verb in the singular, is absolutely unique
at that time378, furthermore it was the usual Jewish substitute for God's name (’adonay
’elohim), the exact counterpart of the expression in Old Canaanite. Another reason for
assimilating the former Hyksos to the Israelites is the context in Palestine around -1500.
S. PASQUALI – Amenhotep II et les divinités du ProcheOrient en Egypte
in: Egypte Afrique & Orient 65 (2012), pp. 11-24.
377 The name Elrapî means “God is a healer” (Nb 13:9). The meaning of Hammubabi “the ancestor is healer (Hammupabi)” is
controversial. The meaning of “Ahiam” (2Sa 23:33) is not clear (in addition the name could also be read as Ahia or Ahiaw).
378 M.S. SMITH – God in Translation: Deities in Cross-Cultural Discourse in the Biblical World
Michigan 2010, Ed Eerdmans Publishing Co, pp. 55-57.
376
117
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
118
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
According to the Bible, the Pharaoh who opposed Moses knew God’s name and
was able to pronounce it: After this, Moses and Aaron went to Pharaoh and said to him: This is
what YHWH, God of Israel, says “Let my people go, so that they can hold a feast in my honour in the
desert”. Who is YHWH, Pharaoh replied, for me to obey what he says and let Israel go? I know nothing
of YHWH, and I will not let Israel go (Ex 5:1-2). According to the Bible of Abbot Crampon
(official Bible of Catholicism in 1904), Pharaoh would have said: Who is Jehovah (...) I know
nothing of Jehovah, however, according to the revision of 1923, he would have rather said:
Who is Yahweh (...) I know nothing of Yahweh. According to Jerusalem Bible (1955)379 he would
have finally said Yahve! There is something lost in translation, but the Pharaoh did not
have to consult some skilled Hebraists
to know how to pronounce YHWH
(fortunately for him) because he spoke
only Egyptian like the Pharaoh
Amenhotep III who had engraved the
Tetragram in a shield380 on a pylon of a
temple. The inscription (right), which
contains the Tetragram, is easy to
decipher381. Indeed, just take an
elementary grammar of Egyptian382 to
transcribe
this
sentence
into
hieroglyphs by: t3 š3-sw-w y-h-w3-w,
which is vocalized in the conventional system (3 = a, w = û, ÿ = i) as: ta shasû-w yehûa-w (the
final w is a plural) and which can be translated as: land (ta) of the Bedouin-s (shasû-w) of Yehouathose (yehûa-w), because û is pronounced ou. The conventional system of vocalization is well
known to all Egyptian makers of engraved pendants in hieroglyphics, generally with the
name of the owner. Then simply ask one of these small manufacturers how he reads the
inscription of the shield, usually the issue immediately following the reading is: but who is this
Yehoua? This demonstrates the lack of difficulty to read this Tetragram in hieroglyphics.
However Egyptologists argue that this reading is speculative because we do not know the
vowels of Egyptian words. This observation is quite accurate but does not include proper
names because foreign proper names make no sense in Egyptian, they should be written in
phonetic through an alphabet provided for this purpose. For example, Queen Hittite
Puduhepa (1297-1215) was cited on numerous documents in different scripts383:
pu-
du- ḫi/ḫe- pa
pu-
pu-
du- ḫe/ḫi- pa
(Hittite hieroglyphs)
p- w- d- w- ḫ-ÿ- p3
p- û- d- û- ḫ-î
pâ
du-
i-
pa
(Syllabic cuneiforms)
(Egyptian hieroglyphs) w3-w3.t
(= Puduhipa)
Wâ-wâ.t land (Lower Nubia)
Official Bible of Catholicism since 1955.
J. LECLANT - Les fouilles de Soleb
in: Annuaire du Collège de France 1980-1981 pp. 474-475.
381 J. LECLANT - Le "Tétragramme" à l'époque d'Aménophis III
in: Near Eastern Studies. Wiesbaden (1991 Ed. Otto Harrassowitz) pp.215-219.
M.C. ASTOUR - Yahweh in Egyptian Topographic Lists
Bamberg 1979 in: Festschrift Elmar Edel pp.17-32.
382 Even Wikipedia gives accurate information in that matter (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Egyptian_language ).
383 G. GERTOUX – The Name of God Y.eH.oW.aH Which is Pronounced as it is Written I_Eh_oU_Ah
New York 2002 Ed. University Press of America pp. 251-264.
379
380
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
Even if one ignores these ancient writings, careful observation of all these
inscriptions enables one to verify that the name of the queen in Egyptian hieroglyphs is
written with an alphabet using the vowels: w = û, ÿ = î and 3 = â. So according to these
equivalences, which confirm to the conventional reading, the Egyptian Tetragram Y-h-w3
should be read Yehua (Yehoua). If this Tetragram was pronounced Yahweh, Egyptians
would have spelled it phonetically Y-3-h-w-h (Yâhûeh) and not Y-h-w3 (Yehûâ)384.
Not only is the conventional pronunciation “Yehua” replaced by Yahweh to be in
agreement with the Hebrew scholars who are themselves dependent on theologians, but
this name corresponding to the Hebrew God is likened to a place name where would have
lived a small group of Bedouin (Shasu). This is ludicrous for at least two reasons: first, the
name Yehûâ is in a group of four names whose three others are well-known Semitic gods,
secondly, Shasu’s name refers to both the country and the people of Palestine. For
example, a list of toponyms enumerates: Pella-foreign land (p-ḥ-r ḫ3st), Shasu-foreign land
(š3-sw-w ḫ3st), Qatna (qd-d-ÿ-n-3), Gezer (q-3-d-3-r). Egyptian texts and their topographical
lists confirm the existence of a vast area inhabited by the Shasu385 or Israelites386.
In the temple of Amun (at Soleb) a column, to the
north of an Eastern portal (thus pointing towards Canaan),
contains a short list of four names387 (opposite figure). This
abnormally short list is composed of at least three unknown
names out of four (from left to right):
The translation of that list according to the conventional reading is as follows, if the
names are those of gods (1) or of place names388 (2):
Transcription
t3 š3-sw-w s3 m-’-ti-i
t3 š3-sw-w y-h-w3 w
t3 š3-sw t-w-r-ÿ b-l
b3-i-ti h ‘-[n-t]
Translation (1)
Land of Shasu after Maat
Land of Shasu those of Yehua
Land of Shasu showing respect to Bel
Bait [house of] A[nat]
Translation (2)
Land of Shasu: Samata
Land of Shasu: Yahwe
Land of Shasu: Turbil/r
Beth A[nat]
The translation (2), which supposes place names, is illogical389 for two reasons: Anat
(Hebrew and Phoenician ענת, ‘Anāt; Ugaritic ‘nt) was a major northwest Semitic goddess,
not a place name, and the three other “place names”: Samata, Yahwe and Turbil/r are
absolutely unknown in the El-Amarna letters. There are two explanations: either Egyptian
scribes or Egyptologists erred (in my opinion it is ***). In contrast, Maat (meaning “truth/
harmony” in Egyptian) was a major goddess of Byblos, Yehowah was the Israelite God, Bel
was the Babylonian Baal (meaning “Lord” in Canaan) and Anat was a major Syrian god. So,
the Egyptians distinguished among different kinds of Canaanite nomads by the chief god
they worshiped. In Ramses II’s lists, the Shasu “Bedouin” in Canaan are distinguished from
one another. For example, at the Battle of Kadesh, a text reads (pap. Anastasi): Came two
Shasu from the tribes of Shasu (...) He takes what is left and joined the (ranks of) wretched. He mingles
with the tribes of Shasu land and disguises himself as those Asiatics (aamu) (I, 23,7-8). We ended
allowing to tribes of Shasu from Seir (Edom) to pass the fortress (VI, 54-56).
For example Yaḥmai (1Ch 7:2) is written: Y-3-ḥ3-3-m3-3 (Ya-ḥa-ma). Sweneh (Ezk 30:6) or Suene (LXX) is written s-w-nw.
A. NEGEV, S. GIBSON – Dictionnaire archéologique de la Bible
Paris 2006 Ed. The Jerusalem Publishing House Ltd. pp. 30-31, 242-245, 282-285.
386 A. RAINEY – Shasu or Habiru : Who Were the Early Israelites ?
in: Biblical Archaeological Society n°34 (2008) pp. 51-55.
387 M. SCHIFF GIORGINI – Soleb V Le temple bas-reliefs et inscriptions
1998 Ed. Institut Français d'Archéologie Orientale pl. 221.
388 ALLEN, SPENCER L., "The Splintered Divine: A Study of Ištar, Baal, and Yahweh Divine Names and Divine Multiplicity in the
Ancient Near East" (2011). Publicly accessible Penn Dissertations (Paper 309), pp. 350-354.
389 C. ALING, C. BILLINGTON -The Name Yahweh in Egyptian Hieroglyphic Text
in Autumn 2009 issue of Artifax.
384
385
119
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
120
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
It is noteworthy that from Ahmose (c. -1530) there is a complete disappearance
(into nowhere!) of any reference to the Hyksos and Syro-Palestine “Retenu” became
suddenly the “land of Kharru390 (Hurrians/Syrians)” for Egyptians. Shortly after, from
Thutmose I (c. -1490) and up to Ramses III (c. -1160), appear (from nowhere!) in Palestine
an important new Asiatic people, called Shasu391, who are extensively described in the
Egyptian iconographic documents392. “Shasu land” in the Egyptian inscriptions was not a
small area of unknown nomads because in the following list of six place names on a chariot
of Thutmose IV (1392-1383), “Shasu land” was considered potentially as a powerful enemy
by the Egyptians like Naharin land (Western Mesopotamia) or Shinar:
1) N-h-r-ÿ-n
Naharin land
2) S3-n-g-r
Shinar's
3) T-w-n-p
Tunip country
4) Š3-sw
Shasu land
5) Q-d-š
Kadesh land
6) Ti-ḫ3-ÿ-s3
Takhsi country.
In the tomb of Anen (TT120), brother-in-law of the king Amenhotep III (13831345), “Shasu” is pictured as one of the nine traditional enemies of Egypt (from right to
left: 1) S-n-g-3-r Shinar land; 2) Kš Kush land (Nubia); 3) N-h-r-ÿ-n Naharin people; 4) ’r-m
Arame; 5) K-f-[ti-w] Keftiu (Philistia); 6) ’Iwnti-Sty Tent-dwellers of Nubia; 7) Tḥnw Tehenu
land (Libya); 8) [Mn]tyw nw Stt Bedouin of Sinai; 9) Š3-sw Shasu (Bedouin of Retenu):
Shasu
Sinai
(Bedouin) Bedouin
Libya
Land
Nubia
Philistia
Tent-dwellers (Land)
Arame
(?)
Naharin
People
Nubia
Land
Shinar
Land
According to the Bible, Moses commanded the Israelites, after they arrived in
Palestine to have the edges of their clothing frayed and to wear tassels at the four corners
of these garments (Nb 15:38-40; Dt 22:12). This coincidence in clothing reinforces the
J-.C. GOYON – De l'Afrique à l'Orient
Paris 2005 Ed. E.J. ellipses pp. 57-61.
391 Shasu refer to Bedouin (“wandering” in Egyptian), called Habiru (“emigrants” in Akkadian) by Canaanites. This identification is
confirmed by the Egyptian priest Manetho himself. He explains the word as Hyksos from hyk-sos "King Shepherd", which is relatively
accurate, because the Egyptian word ḥeq means "ruler/chief" and the word šos actually means “shepherd”. Sahidic translation (late
Egyptian) of Genesis 47:6: if you know any able men among them, then make them rulers over my cattle, used for example the word šos to describe
these “rulers of cattle”. The Hyksos word actually comes from the Egyptian ḥeqaw ḫa’sw.t “Rulers of foreign lands”, but Manetho
connected it to the Shasu appeared later and thus translated it as “Rulers of shepherds” ḥeqaw šosw (in Egyptian š3s means “travelling”).
Studies on Shasu tend to rehabilitate this so-called popular etymology (M.G. HASEL - Domination and Resistance. Egyptian Military Activity in
the Southern Levant, Leiden 1998, Ed. Brill, pp. 217-239). In fact, the Egyptians understood the word shasu as a common noun designating
semi-sedentary shepherds staying mainly in the south of Palestine. They used the phrase “Lands of Shasu”, which shows that they
originally included this phrase as a geographical designation. The fact that they wrote the word sometimes shas (š3s) “wandering” instead
of the usual shasu (š3sw) also shows that they originally included the word as a synonym for “transhumant”.
392 R. GIVEON - Les bédouins Shosou des documents égyptiens
Leiden 1971 Ed. E.J. Brill pp. 248-250.
390
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
identification of Shasu (former Hyksos) with the Israelites393, however most archaeologists
and Egyptologists refuse to identify them with the Israelites for the following reasons:
Objection n°1: according to the Bible, the Exodus had been a complete disaster for
Egypt (Ex 12:33) whereas the 18th dynasty marked the end of the obscure Second
Intermediate Period as well as the beginning of a new powerful empire.
The Egyptian records, themselves, give the answer to the objection. For example, the
Admonitions of Ipuwer clearly explain that the Egyptians had to give their gold and
jewellery to the Israelites in exchange of their food in order to survive and the stela of
Kamose relates that the kingdom of Kush (Kerma) with its numerous mines of gold was
annexed, which allowed Egypt to recover its wealth, furthermore Kamose put an end to
the other vassal kingdom of Egypt (16th dynasty).
Objection n°2: according to the Bible, millions of Israelites spent 40 years in the desert
of Sinaï, first which is strictly impossible, secondly there is absolutely no archaeological
trace of human activity in that part of Egypt at that time (c. -1500).
The Bible says that the Israelites were miraculously fed with manna (Ex 16:3-4),
moreover, millions of Bedouins of the past have never left any archaeological trace. For
example the well known Amorite tribes which destroyed the mighty Ur III Empire and
which produced later many powerful Aramean kingdoms in Syria around -1100 gave no
archaeological evidence of their existence before -1100. If one refuses the narrative of
the Bible regarding the Exodus, how can one explain the sudden vanishing of the
powerful Hyksos kingdom (in Egypt) as well as the sudden emergence at the same time
of numerous Shasu in Palestine?
Objection n°3: If the conquest of Canaan began around -1490 with the destruction of
three big cities: Jericho (Jos 6:1,24), which was burned with fire like Ai (Jos 8:18-19) and
Hazor "the head of all these kingdoms" (Jos 11:11-13), there is a big anomaly because
the city of Ai did not exist at that time “according to archaeology”.
This objection, unanimously accepted by archaeologists, is however triply illogical: 1) If
one chooses the date of -1200 instead of -1550 for the conquest of Canaan because the
city of Ai did not exist in the 16th century BCE then, for the same reason, one should
choose on the contrary the date of -1550, instead of -1200, because the city of Jericho
did not exist in the 13th century BCE; 2) The city of Ai was rebuilt around -1200 and not
completely destroyed as stated in the Bible; 3) If one considers the biblical text as
trusted to describe the conquest of Canaan, one must also accept its date which is fixed
around -1500, three centuries before.
In fact, according to current archaeology, the cities of Jericho, Ai and Hazor already
existed at the time of Abraham394 (c. -2000). The excavations at Tell es-Sultan (identified
with Jericho) showed that the fortifications of this big city were destroyed violently around
-1550 according to the dating from ceramics. The city was abandoned afterward and was
poorly reoccupied during the 14th century BCE before disappearing completely until the 9th
century BCE when some insignificant remains appear again. The excavations near BetAven at Khirbet et-Tell (identified with Ai) showed that the city was destroyed in the
Bronze Age III (c. -2000) and remained abandoned until the early Iron I. Around that date
(c. -1200), a small town was rebuilt which was partially destroyed again at an indefinite
W.G. DEVER - Aux origines d'Israël. Quand la Bible dit vrai
Paris 2003 Éd. Bayard p. 167
A. F. RAINEY - Israel in Merneptah’s Inscription and Reliefs
in: Israel Exploration Journal 51 (2001) pp. 57–75
D.B. REDFORD - The Hyksos Invasion in History and Tradition
in: Orientalia 39 (1970) pp. 1-51.
394 A. NEGEV, S. GIBSON – Dictionnaire archéologique de la Bible
Paris 2006 Ed. The Jerusalem Publishing House Ltd. pp. 30-31, 242-245, 282-285.
393
121
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time. The excavations at Tell el-Waqqas (identified with Hazor) showed that the
fortifications of this big city (it was connected to a wall with casemates, the oldest
discovered in Palestine) were destroyed by a violent fire in the Middle Bronze IIC (end of
level XVI dated c. -1550). A new city-state was built395 in the Late Bronze I (15th century
BCE) which was destroyed by fire at the end of level XIV (dated c. -1300). The city was
destroyed again by a foreign invasion (presumably the Sea Peoples) at the end of level XIII
dated approximately around -1200. The city was finally destroyed by Tiglath-Pileser III
(level VA dated -732). The archaeological dating of all those destructions made
consensus396. Based on these archaeological findings, most biblical scholars conclude that
the conquest of Canaan had to have taken place around -1200 and the details from the
biblical text are unreliable or even erroneous397.
Considering all the archaeological findings for the 3 cities (Jericho, Ai, Hazor), their
destruction around -1550 is the most logical date. Moreover some archaeologists398 find the
identification with Khirbet et-Tell (Ai) unacceptable on the basis of the city's size (Jos 7:3)
and the fact that there is no broad valley to the North of Khirbet et-Tell (Jos 8:11). The city
was probably abandoned around -2000 and rebuilt nearby the ruins of the ancient site
(common phenomenon in Palestine) and was called Ai “ruins”. This “new city” was finally
destroyed around -1550. It is noteworthy that Jebel et-Tawil site, 3 km to the South West
of et-Tell, unearthed a city dated Middle Bronze Age II399 (2100-1550). Anyway, further
archaeological work about Ai is clearly necessary before the problem can be solved without
dispute. The archaeological excavations of the cities of Jericho and Hazor gave results
much more reliable and therefore less controversial. As recalled Finkelstein, before
identifying the factor of a destruction, one must first determine accurately the date of this
destruction, but archaeologists rarely agree between themselves. For example, Finkelstein
himself regularly shows that the earlier dating of his predecessors were wrong400:
DE VAUX
CHAMBON
Level
Date
Period
Date
4 Late Bronze 1200-1100 VIIa
1150-1050
3 Iron I
1100-1000 VIIb
1050-950
HERZOG, SINGER-AVITZ
Period
Date
Early Iron IIA
950-900
Late Iron IIA
900-830
FINKELSTEIN
Period
Early Iron IIA
Late Iron IIA
Date
930-870
870-830
As can be seen in the table above, each archaeologist has his own way of naming
and dating stratigraphic layers. Thus, the oldest layers are thus rejuvenated about 200 years.
This raises two questions: When will this process of rejuvenation cease and the latest
results are they necessarily the most reliable? Contrary to what Finkelstein say learnedly, the
archaeological datings from ceramics for ancient periods (prior to 700 BCE) are still very
inaccurate. Even the few archaeological dates considered as pivotal dates are disputed, for
example one can read: There are many reasons to question the idea that the destruction of Hazor V in
732 BC provides a firm “anchor” in the present chronological debates. The dating of the end of Stratum V
to the Assyrian conquest is merely an assertion which has become a given, used to reconstruct the dates of
preceding and following layers but never properly argued out in its own right —or, for that matter, critically
analysed. It has also given rise to numerous anomalies in the dating of Hazor's Iron IIA-IIB strata,
concerning independently dated imports (from Cyprus, Phoenicia and Mesopotamia), which have previously
K. JOSEPHSON HESSE – Contacts and Trade at Late Bronze Age Hazor
Umeå 2008, Print & Media (Doctoral Dissertation in Archaeology) pp. 221-227.
396 A. MAZAR - Archaeology of the Land of the Bible, 10000-586 BCE
New York 1990 Ed. Doubleday pp. 196, 242, 301, 372-373.
397 R. DE VAUX – Histoire ancienne d'Israël des origines à l'installation en Canaan
Paris 1986 Éd. Gabalda pp. 560-582, 602-605.
398 J. SIMONS in: American Journal of Archeology 51:3 (July-September 1947) p. 311.
399 J.J. BIMSON, D. LIVINGSTON – Redating the Exodus
in: Biblical Archaeological Review 13:5 (September-October 1987) pp. 40-53, 66-68.
400 I. FINKELSTEIN - La royaume biblique oublié
Paris 2013 Éd. Odile Jacob pp. 44-45, 64-68, 113, 122-123, 233-243.
395
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
been treated on an unsatisfactory ad hoc basis. While the Tel Aviv school has now begun to address the
problem of Iron IIA chronology originally raised by Kenyon et al. from their excavations at Samaria,
similar uncertainties in dating extend well into the succeeding Iron IIB and IIC periods. Advocates of the
Tel Aviv version of a ‘Low Chronology’ are working within an unnecessary straitjacket, by adhering to
Yadin's dating of Hazor VII-V. This has led them, while lowering Iron IIA largely into the ninth
century, to conclude that this important phase should be shortened from 200 to 125 years. If we abandon
the “anchor” of 732 BC for the end of Hazor V, and lower Hazor VII into the mid-eighth century, then
Iron IIA might be allowed a slightly longer duration. The related problem, of “stratigraphic congestion”
between strata X-V is also relieved, and a major obstacle is removed to lowering Iron IIA from the 10th to
the 9th century BC401. Archaeological dating is therefore largely conjectural. The C14 dating is
much more accurate (+/- 25 years) if one can be sure that debris are actually measured at
the time of destruction, which is not often the case for two reasons: the materials of
buildings of the past were often reused and dating of wood indicates only when the tree
was felled and not when burned (often 50 years later).
DATING THE FALL OF JERICHO AND HAZOR (IN 1493 BCE)
The destruction of Jericho is well documented in the biblical narrative, as it is the
first Canaanite city conquered by Joshua after entering the land: The Israelites pitched their
camp at Gilgal and kept the Passover there on the 14th day of the month, at evening, in the plain of Jericho.
On the very next day after the Passover, they ate what the land produced, unleavened bread and roasted ears
of corn. The manna stopped the day after they had eaten the produce of the land. The Israelites from that
year onwards [1493 BCE] ate the produce of Canaan and had no more manna (...) The people raised the
war cry, the trumpets sounded. When the people heard the sound of the trumpet, they raised a mighty war
cry and the wall collapsed then and there. At once the people stormed the city, each man going straight
forward; and they captured the city. They burned the city and everything inside it, except the silver, the gold
and the things of bronze and iron; these they put into the treasury of Yahweh's house (Jos 5:11-6:24).
According to the biblical text, Jericho, also called "City of Palms", was reoccupied for 18
years (1404-1386) by Eglon (Jg 3:12-14), a king of Moab. This city had became a small
village, mentioned in the time of David (2Sa 10:5), was rebuilt at the time of Ahab (1Ki
16:33-34) who reigned (919-898) 500 years after the conquest of Joshua.
The city of Jericho, located in front of Mount Nebo, land of Moab (Dt 32:49), was
identified with Tell es-Sultan. Several points of the biblical narrative have been confirmed
by archaeology402: 1) The city was strongly fortified and 2) was on a hillock (the people
went up into the city). 3) The conquest happened in the early spring, just after harvest,
since grain storage jars were full (Joshua 2:6, 3:15, 4:9, and 5:10 show that early spring was
the time of Joshua's siege). 4) Because the storage jars were full, there could not have been
a long siege before the city fell. 5) There were dwellings built up right against the outer
(mudbrick) city wall, such as was the case for Rahab's dwelling. 6) The city wall collapsed to
the base of the tell (Jos 6:20). 7) As established by Kenyon, it was after the walls fell that
the city was burned with an intense conflagration. 8) Following the destruction by fire, the
main part of the city remained uninhabited for a number of decades. 9) During the time
when the city was basically uninhabited, there was found nevertheless an isolated palacelike structure that Garstang called the "Middle Building," dated to the 14th century BCE.
The resident here was well-to-do, as evidenced by a large quantity of imported Cypriot
pottery. 10) The Middle Building was only inhabited for a short time. It's description and
P. JAMES – The Alleged “Anchor Point” of 732 BC for the Destruction of Hazor V
in: Antiguo Oriente Vol 6 (2008), pp. 137-175.
402 B.G. WOOD – Did the Israelites Conquer Jericho? A Ne Look at the Archaeological Evidence
in: Bibkical Archaeology Review 16:2 (March/April 1990), pp. 44-58.
401
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chronology fit the story of Eglon, king of Moab, who set up operations in the abandoned
city of Jericho some decades after the death of Joshua, as recorded in Judges 3:12-30.
The main disagreement comes from dating: according to John Garstang, the
destruction of Jericho took place around -1400, but according to Kathleen Kenyon, the city
was destroyed around -1550 and was then abandoned. Dating the destruction of Jericho is
tricky because the remains of the city are very small and it has been rebuilt at least 7 times.
Fortunately the only layer where there was a destruction by fire is dated around -1550. The
discovery of scarab seals in the name of Thutmose III, Hatshepsut and Amenhotep III,
proves that this city was still inhabited long after this date403. In addition, pottery, type "bichrome Cypriot", appearing only during the Hyksos period404 (1600-1450), have also been
unearthed in this city.
The Carbon-14 dating405 gives two dates: -1563 +/- 38, from a sample of 6 grains
or -1597 +/- 91, from 2 samples406 of charcoal. These results demonstrate two important
points: 1) the accuracy of the Carbon-14 dating is highly dependent on the calibration
curve (complex and evolving), 2) dates obtained from charcoal samples are higher than 34
years because the dating from charcoal is that when the wood was cut down and not when
it burned (several decades later). Dating from the sample of 6 grains is better because it
gives the date of harvest that preceded the fire (a while before).
Two elements, unexplainable by archaeology,
advocate for the biblical narrative: 1) who were the
perpetrators of the destruction? 2) Why were many jars
found at the site still full of grain (opposite figure)?
According to the Bible, the siege was short (7 days), thus
grain reserves will not be initiated. Kenyon believed that
the city had been destroyed by the Egyptians at the time of
the expulsion of the Hyksos407 but this contradicts the
account of Ahmose, son of Abana, who clearly states not having gone beyond Sharuhen
(near Gaza), further, the Egyptians have never been in the area of Jericho. Mazar wrote408:
These subdivisions reflects the major historical developments related to the Egyptian history: LB IA is
J. GARSTANG – The Story of Jericho: Further Light on the Biblical Narrative
in: American Journal of Semitic Languages and Literature 58 (1941), pp. 126, 368-372.
404 A. MAZAR – Archaeology of the Land of the Bible
New York 1990 Ed. Doubleday pp. 216-218, 257-261.
405 H. BRUINS, J. VAN DER PLICHT -Tell-es-Sultan (Jericho): Radiocarbon results of short-lived cereal and multiyear charcoal samples
from the end of the Middle Bronze Age in: Radiocarbon 37:2 (1995) pp. 213-220.
406 Excavations at Jericho, 1998. Preliminary Report on the Second Season of Excavations and Surveys at Tell es-Sultan, Palestine
in: Quaderni di Gerico 2 (2000) pp. 206-207, 330, 332.
407 K.M. KENYON – Palestine in the Middle Bronze Age
in: Cambridge Ancient History Vol. 2 Part 1 (1973), pp. 92-93.
408 A. MAZAR - Archaeology of the Land of the Bible, 10000-586 BCE
New York 1990 Ed. Doubleday pp. 238-241.
403
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
parallel to the period of the Eighteenth Dynasty, between the expulsion of the Hyksos and the conquest of
Canaan by Tuthmosis III (...) Indeed, it appears that southern Palestine suffered from of wave of
devastation in the sixteenth century B.C.E.; such devastation was probably brought about by the Egyptians
in their struggle against the Hyksos, who retreated to this area after their expulsion from Egypt. The only
plausible explanation is to identify the Hyksos with the Israelites who, according to the
biblical text, burned three cities: Jericho, Ai, and Hazor during their conquest of Canaan
(Jos 6:1,24; 8:19; 11:11-13). Again to explain this destruction, one must imagine wars (not
documented) between the small kingdoms of Canaan. This explanation, however, is
illogical, because which kingdom could defeat Hazor, one of the most powerful cities of
the time (the Egyptians and Babylonians were absent from this region)? In addition, the
walls of this Canaanite city are identical to those excavated at Tell el-Yahudiyeh and at
Heliopolis (in the east of the Delta in Egypt), typical of the Hyksos fortifications409 of this
period. All these datings are consistent and confirm indirectly the biblical text.
The archaeological dating of the destruction of Jericho, according to the Carbon 14
(calibrated) is around -1550. However, these 14C measures overestimate dates about 50
years, during this period, compared with those from Egyptian chronology410. This
difference implies a date, calibrated and corrected, around -1500, in good agreement with
the dating 1493 BCE, according to the Masoretic chronology. Moreover, according to the
biblical text, several regions conquered by the Israelites, after their entry into Canaan,
varied in space and also in time411. Given the complexity at that time of boundaries in
Canaan, of their quick changes, of the presence of many ethnic groups (Philistines,
Amalekites, Moabites, Ammonites, Arameans or Syrians, Sidonians or Phoenicians,
Israelites/ Shasu, etc.) who also varied in time and space, it is impossible for archaeology to
write the history of this region, solely chronology can enlighten such complex events. The
complete destruction of the walled city of Jericho around -1500 involves attributing it to
the Hyksos and therefore to the Israelites, in the same way the destruction of the powerful
city of Hazor at the same time which was "the head of all these kingdoms" (Jos 11:11-13).
Prior to -1800, Hazor and Laish are the only 2 cities
of Canaan mentioned in the archives of Mari which attach
great importance to Hazor. Geti, king of Hazor, is listed in
the Execration Texts (dated c. -1950) and Ibni-Addu, king of
Hazor, whose name is written in Old Babylonian (opposite
figure)412, appears in letters to the kings of Mari413 (dated c.
1700 BCE). The city of Hazor has a long history and “Jabin”
was a dynastic name414, in addition, Hazor was destroyed
several times including twice by fire at the end of layer XVI
around -1550 +/- 60 and at the end of layer XIII about -1200
+/- 25. An important question is to know "who" destroyed
this mighty city of Hazor and "when". The biblical solution: Israelites around -1500, is now
denied415 because most archaeologists and Egyptologists have abandoned the
A. MAZAR – Archeology of the Land of the Bible
New York 1990 Ed. Doubleday pp. 194-202.
410 H. HAAS, ET AL – Radiocarbon Chronology and the Historical Calendar in Egypt
in: Chronologies in the Near East (Ed. O. Aurenche et al, 1987), pp. 585-606.
411 Y. AHARONI – The Land of the Bible
Philadelphia 1979, Ed. The Westminster Press pp. 202-214.
412 The tablet is damaged, the first line is as follows: a-na ib-ni[dIM] “To Ibni[Addu]”.
413 J. BRIEND – Israël et les nations
in: Supplément au Cahiers Évangile 69 (Cerf, 1989) pp. 14-16.
414 K. VAN BEKKUM – From Conquest to Coexistence
Leiden 2011, Ed. Brill, pp. 166 n. 162,355.
415 C. MEYERS – Exodus
Cambridge 2005 Ed. Cambridge University Press p. 5.
409
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archaeological investigation of Moses and the Exodus, regarding it as "a fruitless pursuit".
In addition, the consensus among biblical scholars today is that there was never any
Exodus of the proportions described in the Bible, and that the story is best seen as
theology. Certain biblical scholars (in the past) supposed that the destruction of Hazor by
fire, around -1200, was caused by the Israelites. This hypothesis is absolutely ludicrous for
the following reasons: 1) the error in the biblical chronology would be about 300 years (no
comment)! 2) If the Israelites were those who destroyed Hazor by fire around -1200 they
would have left Egypt around -1250 just after the death of Pharaoh in the Red Sea (Ps
136:15). It is easy to verify that no Pharaoh of this era experienced any trouble in Egypt
and died in a violent manner. Thus, both Ramses II (1283-1216) and Merneptah (12161207) lived peacefully. 3) There was a violent crisis dated around 1200 BCE caused by the
Sea Peoples416 which hit all the eastern Mediterranean and caused the ruin of the great
empires of the Bronze Age, of which the Trojan War is the most famous episode.
Numerous cities were destroyed: Thebes, Lefkandi, Tiryns, Mycenae and Pylos in
mainland Greece and Chania in Crete were ransacked and sometimes completely destroyed.
Most of these cities and their palaces were burned. In Anatolia, among the most important
sites, archaeological levels similarly destroyed are found and which date from the same
period. Hattusa, the Hittite capital, was sacked and burned just like the major cities of
Cyprus. On the north coast of Syria, the flourishing city of Ugarit was destroyed and never
inhabited thereafter. Mesopotamia was preserved as the wave of devastation did not extend
R. MORKOT – Historical Atlas of Ancient Greece
London 1996 Ed. Penguin Books pp. 30-31.
416
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
to the east, and it was the Egyptians who alone could stop it. The temple of Ramses III at
Medinet Habu contains an account of this victory over the Sea Peoples. The identification
of these peoples and their reasons for migration are poorly understood417, however, these
events are precisely dated year 8 of Ramses III in 1185 BCE. This war led by the Sea
Peoples had to be spread over less than one year because, according to the inscription of
Ramses III, all countries (Hatti, the coast of Cilicia, Carchemish, Cyprus, etc.) were
"destroyed all at once" and, according to the text of Homer, the sacking of the city of
Priam [Troy], after 10 years of fighting, was followed "in less than 1 month" by the cruise
of Achaeans to Egypt and the sacking of its wonderful fields (Odyssey XIV:240-280). This
destruction coincides with the fall of the Hittite Empire dated year 2 of Meli-Shipak418 in
1185 BCE. The great Alexandrian scholar Eratosthenes (276-193) dated the famous Trojan
War to 1184 BCE and Manetho419, while confirming the 7-year reign of Queen Tausert
(1202-1194) stated: Thouôris, (...) at the time when Troy was taken, reigned 7 years420. Some
important Canaanites cities: Megiddo (Stratum VIIB), Beth-Shean (Stratum VII), Gezer
(Stratum XV), Lachish (Stratum VII), Ashdod (Stratum XIV) were totally destroyed, the
largest and most influential of which was Hazor. This wave of destructions corresponded
with the termination of the Egyptian presence in Canaan421.
It is noteworthy that the destruction of Hazor around 1500 BCE, the most
powerful Canaanite city of that time, may have been caused only by the Hyksos422. Most
archaeologists reject such a conclusion (one can guess why) and prefer to either ignore it
(most common) or to link it to the campaign of Thutmose III in Palestine. The latter
hypothesis is ludicrous because of the following reasons:
Thutmose III came to Palestine only from his 23rd year of reign (c. -1450), which
occurred around 50 years after the destruction of Hazor.
Thumose III did not destroy Hazor but rather looted the city423, he is far more likely to
have subjugated Hazor than actually to have destroyed it. In support of this conclusion
is the parallel that exists with several other cities that were destroyed or subjugated by
Thutmose III and Amenhotep II. Relevant among these cities are Aleppo, Kadesh, and
Tunip. Kadesh, which is considered to have been the most powerful city in Syria and
was already mentioned as being the focal point of rebellious opposition to Egypt at the
outset of the reign of Thutmose III, is the closest of these cities in proximity to Hazor.
Not to be deterred, Egypt’s greatest imperialistic pharaoh eventually attacked Kadesh
and “destroyed” the city. However, Pritchard notes this about the invasion of Kadesh:
The word ‘destroy,’ used with reference to this town, is not to be taken literally; Thutmose may have
done no more than destroy its food supplies. Redford concurs, as he writes: The mountains were
crossed and Kadesh attacked directly. Although the terse entry in the daybook reads ‘destroying it,’ it is
clear that the city itself did not fall, and suffered only the laying waste of its orchards and crops.
In conclusion, the destruction of the powerful city of Hazor (in -1550 +/- 60
according to C14 dating) must be assigned to the Israelites, called Hyksos (ḥq3w ḫ3swt) and
S. PECZYNSKI – The Sea People and their Migration
New Jersey 2009, Ed. Rutgers University (PhD in History), pp. 62-105.
418 The last texts from Emar are dated [-]/VI2/2 and 6/VII/[2] of Meli-Shipak, in October 1185 BCE (Y. COHEN, I. SINGER – A Late
Synchronism between Ugarit and Emar in: Essays on Ancient Israel in Its Near Eastern Context, Ed. Eisenbrauns 2006, Indiana p. 134).
419 W.G. WADDELL – Manetho (1956 Harvard University Press) pp. 101-119.
420 Tausert actually reigned, from 1195 to 1194, at the beginning of the war, 10 years before the destruction of Troy. According to
Thucydides, the Trojan War was the result of an expedition of disparate tribes of pirates (see Odyssey III:71-74), living on islands around
Achaia, who were united by King Agamemnon of Mycenae. This expedition against the Trojans was the culmination of 10 years of battle
(The Peloponnesian War I:8-12). For example, a battle in Egypt is mentioned in the year 5 of Rameses III.
421 A. MAZAR - Archaeology of the Land of the Bible, 10000-586 BCE
New York 1990 Ed. Doubleday pp. 287.
422 H. BRUINS, J. VAN DER PLICHT -Tell-es-Sultan (Jericho): Radiocarbon results of short-lived cereal and multiyear charcoal samples
from the end of the Middle Bronze Age in: Radiocarbon 37:2 (1995) p. 217.
423 D. PETROVICH –The Dating Of Hazor’s Destruction In Joshua 11 By Way Of Biblical, Archaeological, And Epigraphical Evidence
in: Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society 51:3 (Sept 2008) pp. 489-512.
417
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Asiatics (‘3mw) by the Egyptians424. More and more scholars agree now that the “Egyptian
hypothesis” of the so-called “War of the Hyksos” is in fact a myth425. In Palestine, the
transition from the Middle Bronze II to the Late Bronze Age (c. 1550-1450 BCE) was
marked by a severe settlement crisis. All urban centres were destroyed, some were
abandoned and resettled only much later, and others suffered serious regression.
The traditional explanations for the destruction and abandonment of the Middle
Bronze II urban system is that it was mainly the result of the Egyptian campaigns during
the early decades of the 18th Dynasty. The conquest of Palestine was regarded as the
continuation of the war with the Hyksos directed against their Canaanites allies, and this
conquest culminated in the establishment of the Egyptian Empire in Asia under Thutmose
III. Many new excavations and the extensive surveys of the hill country have demonstrated
the true nature of the MB/LB transition, but the traditional explanation for the transition
was uncritically sustained, and the Egyptian military campaigns of the early 18th Dynasty
were regarded as the major (or even exclusive) cause for the utter destruction of hundreds
of settlements throughout Palestine in the 16th-early 15th century BCE. Several scholars
have criticized this simplistic and one-sided interpretation: Redford (1979) and Hoffmeier
(1991) demonstrated that there is no textual support for the assumption of widespread
devastation of cities and villages over Palestine by the Egyptians. In the 16th century BCE
there is a gap in documentation but we find that the number of people of Semitic origin in
the population of Palestine increased significantly. The conquest of Sharuhen (south of
Palestine), the only one mentioned by the Egyptians, does not prove that they conquered
the rest of Palestine. Furthermore, Thutmose III’s campaign into Canaan was conducted
against a coalition of Syro-Canaanite kingdoms headed by the king of Kadesh and
supported by Mitanni and her allies; this coalition threatened to drive Egypt back beyond
the Sinai peninsula. The anarchic conditions caused by the destruction of cities by northern
groups and the struggle for survival of the local rulers has nothing to do with the Hyksos
who would have led the consolidation of a coalition (under the hegemony of Kadesh) and
the efforts of the northern groups to unite their forces to defeat Egypt and drive her out of
the land of Canaan. Mitanni gained supremacy in northern Syria and apparently operated in
the Canaanite areas through the centre of Kadesh, a kingdom whose ruler was the
strongest in the area. With the support of Mitanni, the king of Kadesh was able to organize
a vast coalition whose members were mainly rulers of northern origin. A prominent
member was the king of Megiddo, whose city served as headquarters for the coalition. This
alliance succeeded in pushing Egypt back into southern Canaan and threatened to drive the
Egyptians all the way back to their homeland. This expansion occurred during the reign of
the Egyptian queen Hatshepsut and forms the background for Thutmose’s first Asiatic
campaign (c. 1450 BCE).
Dever (1990) said: All archaeological evidence points to a long, homogenous, peaceful period of
development and expansion throughout the Middle Bronze Age in Palestine (phases IIA-C) of nearly 500
years, with the zenith at the very end; and that: a major cultural-historical change had taken place by the
end of the 15th century BCE, when Palestine (...) was completely subdued, pacified. Indeed, according
to archaeology, over the period 1450-950 BCE, there was neither war nor conquest in
Palestine by the Egyptians before Shoshenq I, exactly as the Bible relates. Although most
Egyptologists are allergic to assimilating the Hyksos in Egypt with the Hebrews, then with
the Asiatics (Aamu) of Shasu land (Palestine), this conclusion is the only one that is
consistent with all historical documents.
T.M. KENNEDY –The Israelite Conquest: History or Myth? An Archaeological Evaluation of the Israelite Conquest During the
Periods of Joshua and the Judges in: Master of Arts report (University of South Africa, 2011) pp. 106-142.
425 N. NA’AMAN –The Hurrians and the End of the Middle Bronze Age in Palestine
in: Canaan in the 2nd Millenium B.C.E. (Eisenbrauns, 2005), pp. 1-20.
424
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
According to archaeologists: the most significant event concerning Palestine was the expulsion
of the Hyksos from Egypt in the mid-sixteenth century B.C.E. The Hyksos princes fled from the eastern
Delta of Egypt to southern Palestine; the Egyptians followed them there and put them under siege in the city
of Sharuhen. This event was probably followed by turmoil and military conflicts throughout the country, as
a significant number of Middle Bronze cities were destroyed during the mid-sixteenth century B.C.E. These
destructions caused a collapse in entire urban clusters in the country. Thus, in the south, cities along Beersheba and Besor brooks were destroyed, and they hardly continued to exist in the following period. These
include Tell el-Ajjul (Sharuhen?), Tell el-Far‘ah South, Tel Malhata, and Tel Masos. In the coastal plain
and the Shephelah, Tell Beit Mirsim, Gezer, Tel Batash and Aphek suffered from destruction and severe
changes in their occupation history (...) Indeed, it appears that southern Palestine suffered from a wave of
devastation in the sixteenth century B.C.E.; such devastation was probably brought about by the Egyptians
in their struggle against the Hyksos, who retreated to this area after their expulsion from Egypt426. Given
that the expulsion of the Hyksos from Egypt is never mentioned in any Egyptian
documents, the most significant event concerning Palestine in the mid-sixteenth century B.C.E. was
actually the conquest of Canaan by the Hyksos, called “sons of Israel” in the Bible. Why
archaeologists refuse such identification? Their answer is really amazing: “because the
conquest of Canaan occurred around 1250 BCE”! For example, one reads: An overall
examination of the conquest tradition in the archaeological context illustrates the complexity of the subject
and the various possibilities for interpretation of the finds. Included in the narrative of the wanderings of the
Israelites in the Book of Numbers is a battle against “the Canaanite king of Arad who lived in the
Negev” (Numbers 21:1). Concerning the Israelite victory, the text continues (Numbers 21:3 and compare
33:40): “they completely destroyed them and their towns, so the place was named Hormah.” According to
this tradition, the Israelites journeyed to the region of Arad from Kadesh-Barnea (...) two mounds were
settled in MB II, ca. 2000-1550 B.C.E. (Tel Malhata and Tel Masos). This archaeological determination
is important for assessing the biblical tradition’s historical reliability in regard to the region. Does the
biblical narrative reflect an earlier period (in this case, perhaps MB II) during which Canaanites settled the
region? (...) [This] possibility seems unlikely. It is more feasible that the biblical stories were formulated as
a literary tradition of no historical value when the Israelites began settling this region at the end of the period
of the Judges and at the time of Monarchy. This conclusion is flabbergasting. Despite their
excellent overlap the data from the Bible and archaeology would be false because this
conquest took place around 1250 BCE according to (the propaganda of) Egyptologists.
In addition, the fanciful explanations from archaeologists are contradicted by their
own archaeological discoveries: For four hundred years from the mid-sixteenth century B.C.E., the
history of the land of Canaan was, to a large extent, interrelated with and dictated by Egyptian activity in
Asia and the reactions of Egypt’s northern enemies. The Canaanite city-states as well as other population
groups in the country were under the yoke of Egyptian domination and exploitation for most of this period;
this resulted in the deterioration of Canaanite culture. Nevertheless, the Canaanites played an important
role in the international culture sphere during the Late Bronze Age (ca. 1550-1200 B.C.E.). The
expulsion of the Hyksos and the reunification of Egypt by Pharaoh Ahmose (1550-1225 B.C.E.), the
founder of the Eighteenth Dynasty culminated in a strong Egypt both militarily and economically, and in
renewed Egyptian interest in Canaan. Ahmose himself crossed the Sinai Desert and laid siege to the
Hyksos troops who found refuge at Sharuhen. Yet, it appears that during this early phase of the Eighteenth
Dynasty, lasting about eighty years, there were only sporadic Egyptian incursions into Canaan427. It's
magic, because the 18th Dynasty would have culminated militarily in Canaan but it also
appears that during the early phase, lasting about 80 years, there were only sporadic
Egyptian incursions into Canaan (in fact none!). To sum up, Egypt conquered Canaan
A. MAZAR – Archeology of the Land of the Bible
New York 1990 Ed. Doubleday pp. 226,240,329-330.
427 A. MAZAR – Archeology of the Land of the Bible
New York 1990 Ed. Doubleday pp. 177,232-233.
426
129
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without army, that's a bit much! Even stranger, in the south of Canaan (Judea) many
Canaanite cities428 have totally escaped Egyptian influence during the Late Bronze Age
(1500-1200 BCE) as: el-Khalil Hebron (Jos 14:15), Khirbet et-Tubêqa Beth-Zur (Jos 15:58), Tell
Beit Misim (unidentified), Khirbet er-Rabud Debir (Jos 15:15), Tell Sera‘ Ziklag (Jos 15:21,31),
Tel Halif Rimmon? (Jos 15:32), Tell Arad, Tel Malhata and Tel Masos Arad (Nb 21:1). These
cities are never mentioned in Amarna letters despite their existence is confirmed by
archaeology (below). The inhabitants of these southern cities of Canaan are a mystery to
archaeologists, because they had no connection with the Canaanites and Egyptians, they
only know that in the Egyptian tombs of el-Amarna they are called "Shasu" (Israelites!).
428 For example: Mamre (Ramat el-Khallil), Aroer (Khirbet Arair), Beer-sheba (Tell Sheba), Dan (Tell el-Qadi), Adullam (Khirbet eshSheikh Madhkur), Libnah (Tell Burna), Shiloh (Khirbet Seilum), Tirzah (Tell el-Far‘ah), Eshtemoa (es-Semu‘a), Jattir (Khirbet el-Attir),
Juttah (Yatta), etc., however these cities have left no archaeological remains during the Late Bronze Age (1500-1200 BCE).
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
WHEN THE HYKSOS LEFT EGYPT THE SHASU ARRIVED IN PALESTINE
Little is known about the end of Hyksos rule in Egypt, particularly at Avaris. In his
tomb at Elkab, Ahmose son of Ibana mentions only that “one captured Avaris”. Flavius
Josephus, who may have had some direct access to Egyptian traditions, wrote that forcing a
surrender of Avaris by blockading did not work, and that the Egyptians gave up in despair.
They would have concluded a treaty by which all the "shepherds" were to leave Egypt,
taking their possessions and households on a desert trip to Syria. Following Josephus,
historians have not only concluded that the Hyksos were driven out and moved to
Palestine, but also that that they had come from there. Egyptologists have seldom
appreciated the impact that the Hyksos rule must have made on Egypt. They have largely
taken over the ancient Egyptian doctrine that it had been an unpleasant interlude and
produced no more than a Theban counter-reaction that brought on the New Kingdom.
However, it is only realistic to assume that the presence of a considerable number of
Western Asiatic people in north-eastern Egypt (c. 1820-1530) helped to shape the
succeeding New Kingdom culture. Could this population have disappeared, and could it be
that 300 years of cultural interaction in the Delta were brought to a halt the moment that
Avaris was taken and the Hyksos kingdom destroyed? This scenario is highly unlikely.
According to archaeological sources, Avaris was abandoned, and archaeological
evidence has shown no signs of destruction besides the looting of tombs. This would be
entirely in keeping with Josephus story. In several areas, however, settler activity continued
into the 18th Dynasty. However, according to M. Bietak429: Summing up, we have no evidence that
the Western Asiatic population who carried the Hyksos rule in Egypt was expelled to the Levant, except
for the Manethonian/Josephus tradition. While one cannot rule out that elite groups moved to southern
Canaan at the end of the Hyksos Period, especially to Sharuhen, there is mounting evidence to suggest that
a large part of this population stayed in Egypt and served their new overlords in various capacities. These
people contributed in many ways to New Kingdom culture and society and seem to have built a lasting local
tradition in the eastern Delta, kept alive by the cultic installations of Canaanite gods, particularly Seth of
Avaris, down to Ramesside times. However, the conclusion of Bietak: there is mounting evidence to
suggest that a large part of this population stayed in Egypt and served their new overlords in various
capacities, is wrong because of the following reasons:
Historical reasons. We have a lot of evidence that the Western Asiatic population who
carried the Hyksos rule in Egypt was expelled to the Levant, according to: 1) Hecataeus of
Abdera, a Greek historian and sceptic philosopher (c. -300), 2) Manetho, an Egyptian
priest (c. -280), 3) Demetrius the Chronograph, a Jewish historian (c. -220), 4) Artapanus, a
Hellenistic Jewish historian (c. 200), 5) Eupolemus, a Hellenistic Jewish historian (c. -160),
6) Lysimachus of Alexandria, an Egyptian grammarian (c. -100), 7) Diodorus of Sicily, a
Greek historian (c. -50), 8) Strabo, a Greek geographer, philosopher and historian (c. 20
CE), 9) Chaeremon of Alexandria, a Stoic philosopher, historian, and grammarian. He was
superintendent of the portion of the Alexandrian library that was kept in the Temple of
Serapis, and as custodian and expounder of the sacred books he belonged to the higher
ranks of the Egyptian priesthood (c. 50). 10) Tacitus, a senator and a historian of the
Roman Empire (c. 100), 11) Tatian an Assyrian early Christian writer (c. 160-170), 12)
Eusebius, a Roman historian, exegete and Christian polemicist (c. 300), 13) Moses of
Khoren, a prominent Armenian historian (370-486). According to Manetho: He (Salitis)
rebuilt (Avaris), and made very strong by the walls he built about it, and by a most numerous garrison
of 240,000 armed men whom he put into it to keep it. Thither Salatis came in summer time, partly to
M. BIETAK – From Where Came the Hyksos and Where did they go?
in: The Second Intermediate Period (Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 192, 2010) pp. 164-171.
429
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gather his corn, and pay his soldiers their wages, and partly to exercise his armed men, and thereby to
terrify foreigners (...) [Ahmose] the son of [Seqenenre] made an attempt to take them by force and by
siege, with 480,000 men to lie rotund about them, but that, upon his despair of taking the place by that
siege, they came to a composition with them, that they should leave Egypt, and go, without any harm to
be done to them, whithersoever they would; and that, after this composition was made, they went away
with their whole families and effects, not fewer in number than 240,000 [soldiers], and took their
journey from Egypt, through the wilderness, for Syria; but that as they were in fear of the Assyrians,
who had then the dominion over Asia, they built a city in that country which is now called Judea, and
that large enough to contain this great number of men, and called it Jerusalem (Against Apion I:78,
88-90). According to the biblical account: Jehovah spoke to Moses, in the desert of Sinai, in the
Tent of Meeting, on the 1st day of the 2nd month, in the 2nd year after the exodus from Egypt, and said:
Take a census of the whole community of Israelites by clans and families, taking a count of the names of
all the males, head by head. All the Israelites of 20 years and over, fit to bear arms, were counted by
families Altogether, the total came to 603,550 (Nb 1:1-2, 45-46). It is noteworthy that the
figures from Manetho's narrative are similar with those from the Bible.
Logical reasons. The port of Avaris contained 300 ships, which involves this city
containing tens of thousands of people, has been completely removed. If this crowd of
Asiatics remained in Egypt (after the sack) they would have constituted a serious threat
of revolt for Kamose. Moreover, how does one explain that Kamose succeeded
relatively easily in crushing the Asiatics who were associated with the revolt of Teti, the
mighty Viceroy of Kush, and he had not been able to face the Asiatics in Avaris.
Archaeological reasons. There is a complete disappearance of any reference to the
Hyksos from Ahmose and Palestine “Lower Retenu (Syria)” became suddenly the “land
of Ḫarru430 (Hurrians)” for Egyptians. Shortly after, from Thutmose I and up to Ramses
III, there appears in Palestine an important new Asiatic people, called Shasu, who are
extensively described in the Egyptian iconographic documents431. One must note that
“Ḫarru” meant a geographical area and not ethnicity because among 23 names found in
Taanach Letters (c. -1450), 14 are Semitic, 5 are Aryan and only 4 are Hurrian432.
Shasu refer to Bedouins, called Habiru ("emigrants" in Akkadian) by Canaanites433.
This identification is confirmed by Manetho who explains the word Hyksos coming from
hyk-sos "King Shepherd", which is relatively accurate, because the Egyptian word ḥeq means
"ruler/chief" and the word šos actually means "shepherd". Sahidic translation (late
Egyptian) of Genesis 47:6: if you know any able men among them, then make them rulers over my
cattle, used for example the word šos to describe these "rulers of cattle". The Hyksos word
actually comes from the Egyptian ḥeqaw ḫa’sw.t "Rulers of foreign lands", but Manetho
connected it to the Shasu appearing later and thus translated it as "Rulers of shepherds"
434
ḥeqaw šosw (in Egyptian š3s means "travelling"). Studies on Shasu rehabilitate this so-called
popular etymology because the Egyptians understood the word shasu as a common noun
designating semi-sedentary shepherds staying mainly in the south of Palestine. They used
the phrase "Land of Shasu", which shows that they originally included this phrase as a
geographical designation. The fact that they wrote the word shas (š3s) "wandering" instead
of the usual shasu (š3sw) also shows that they originally included the word as a synonym.
J-.C. GOYON – De l'Afrique à l'Orient
Paris 2005 Ed. E.J. ellipses pp. 57-61.
431 R. GIVEON - Les bédouins Shosou des documents égyptiens
Leiden 1971 Ed. E.J. Brill pp. 248-250.
432 R. DE VAUX - Histoire ancienne d'Israël des origines à l'installation en Canaan
Paris 1986 Éd. Gabalda pp. 86-96.
433 D. CHARPIN – Hammu-rabi de Babylone
Paris, 2003, Éd. Presses Universitaires de France p. 238.
434 M.G. HASEL - Domination and Resistance. Egyptian Military Activity in the Southern Levant
Leiden 1998 Ed. Brill pp. 217-239.
430
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
The spatial and temporal distribution of Tell el-Yahudiyeh Ware (which is a distinctive
ceramic ware435 of the late Middle Bronze Age name from its type site at Tell el-Yahudiyeh
"Mountain of the Jews"), confirms that the Shasu of Canaan had an identical culture.
Cultural intimacy between southern Levantine city-states such as Pella or Sharuhen and the
Hyksos Kingdom grew on the back of a flourishing economic relationship436.
Several Egyptian depictions confirm the link between former Hyksos and Shasu,
such as hairstyle and the use of a particular weapon: a curved trencher or scimitar437. These
shasu warriors are portrayed on Egyptian frescoes with this weapon, already used by the
Hyksos (and by the Egyptians who had borrowed them) and before by the Sumerians438 (as
King E-anatum c. -2300). The axe of Canaanite type called garzen, was very common in the
East and was also used by the Israelites (Dt 20:19). The first information about Asiatics
appears with Ahmose-Pennekhbet439, a former Egyptian general, who recounts in his
biography that at the time of [enthronement of] Thutmose II (c. -1472) he made prisoners
in Nubia and Naharin [Mitanni] and during a punitive expedition in the North (Canaan),
some Shasu were in his passage forcing him to crush them: I followed the king Aakheperenre
(Thutmose II), justified, what I brought from the country of Shasu: many prisoners alive. I could not count
them. The term “country” (line 2) indicates a large area (inside Canaan) where the Bedouins
M. BIETAK – Egypt and Canaan During the Middle Bronze Age
in BASOR 281 (1991) pp. 58-59.
436 S.J. BOURKE, K.O. ERIKSSON – Pella in Jordan, Royal Name Scarabs and the Hyksos Empire
in: Timelines Studies in Honour of Manfred Bietak Vol. II (2006) pp. 339-348.
437 R. GIVEON - Les bédouins Shosou des documents égyptiens
Leiden 1971 Ed. E.J. Brill pp. 248-254.
438 J. B. PRITCHARD - The Ancient Near East in Pictures
Princeton 1969 Ed. Princeton University Press p. 95.
439 R. GIVEON - Les bédouins Shosou des documents égyptiens
Leiden 1971 Ed. E.J. Brill pp. 9-10.
435
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Shasu permanently resided. The Egyptian records of Thutmose II mention neither Israel
nor the Israelites for two reasons: 1) according to the biblical narrative the Egyptians never
attacked Israel before the military campaign of Pharaoh Shoshenq I in 972 BCE and 2)
Palestine (called Upper Retenu by Egyptians and Canaan by Israelites) was systematically
called “land of Israel” (1Sa 13:19) instead of “land of Canaan” only from King Saul's time
(c. 1100 BCE), before that date the name “Israel” meant “sons of Israel”, not “land of
Israel”. Under the Thutmose III's reign (1472-1418), information about Asiatics (Aamu) in
Canaan and Hyksos appear in the stela (below) relating his 1st campaign into Retenu (SyroPalestine), dated in the year 23 of his reign (c. -1450):
3) All lands and all foreign countries, subdued, are under his sandals, one went to him head down, and
bowing in front of his lightning. Foreign rulers [Hyksos] over the entire Earth recognize: He [Thutmose
III] is our master. It is he who has made them come back to him by the fear he inspires.
4) There is no country that he has trampled to expand the borders of Egypt by victories, thanks to his
power. Neither millions nor hundreds of thousands of men put off his courage. It is a brave king who, in the
melee, made great slaughters among Asiatic coalitions.
5) He is the one that makes rulers of Retenu's land, in their entirety, to be required to provide their
tribute and be subject to the annual tax like the people who depend on his palace.
6) He is more effective alone than an army of many thousands of men. He is a so valiant fighter that no
one can match in the entire country, neither in his army, nor among foreign rulers [Hyksos], nor South, nor
North. This is a king who deserves his power exalted as much as his valour. Egypt has increased since his
inception: it fears no other country,
7) it has not to worry about the South, nor to worry about the North (...)
8) The lands of Min and Kush were its subjects, offering it their production of gold, in abundance, ivory
and ebony, without limit. There was no king who has done what he has done among all the kings that have
existed so far.
The boastful tales of this pharaoh440, coalesce in the same feud: rulers of foreign
lands (Hyksos), rulers of Retenu's land and Asiatics (‘aamu) coalitions (northern part of
Megiddo)441. In the topographical lists of Thutmose III about this campaign no place is
cited in southern Palestine442, usually associated with Shasu, with the exception of the
Negeb. The Egyptians therefore met few Shasu only around Megiddo and Taanach.
According to the Old Testament, under the command of Joshua, the Israelites defeated the
kings of Megiddo and Taanach around 1490 BCE (Jos 12:7,21) but the Manassites failed to
drive out the Canaanites from these cities. Eventually these Canaanites were put to forced
labour (Jg 1:27-28). Taanach and Megiddo are mentioned as Canaanite cities by Thutmose
A.S. VON BOMHARD - Le calendrier Égyptien. Une œuvre d'éternité
London 1999 Ed. Periplus pp. 42-43.
441 P. GRANDET – Les pharaons du Nouvel Empire : une pensée stratégique
Paris 2008 Éd. du Rocher pp. 89,295-303.
442 B. MANLEY – Historical Atlas of Ancient Egypte
London 1996 Ed. Penguin Books pp. 70-73.
440
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
III (c. 1450 BCE), given that Talwashur the Canaanite mayor of Tanaach had had an
assistant, Ahiami, who was an Israelite (and probably it was the same for Megiddo)
Thutmose III was able to meet some Shasu at the north of Palestine. It should be noted
that he carefully avoided the land of Shasu (Palestine) in all his campaigns towards Syria.
The city of Aphek (Jos 19:30) was not conquered and remained Canaanite (Jg 1:31).
135
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
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THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
Thutmose III also claims in his
annals (text opposite), that during his 14th
campaign (dated -1434) he stayed in Retenu
after defeating the Shasu land: Year 39: His
Majesty was in Retenu land during his 14th
successful campaign after he had (to do) the
vanquished Shasu land. This occurred long
after the conquest of the Syrian port cities which enabled him to take the sea route to
approach his northern enemies443. Its main purpose was to appease a rebellion, and at the
same time, open roads to the Egyptian army. This campaign against the land of Shasu was
of a secondary character but numerous Canaanite cities seized by the Israelites, such as
Hazor or Beth-Shean, passed under Egyptian control444 (Jg 1:28-33; 3:1-5).
"Naharine" (Mesopotamia) became a political entity called "Mitanni" from its first
king known as Kirta (1500-1485). Thus, from Thutmose III, Egyptian topographical lists445
include both Naharine (n-h-r-ÿ-n) and Mitanni (m-t-n). It is noteworthy that the period 14801450 corresponds to a period of expansion westwards of Mitanni (as far as Syria), mainly
due to the policy of conquest of two powerful kings446: Barattarna I (1480-1455) and
Šauštatar I (1455-1435). The Egyptians were concerned about that aggressive expansion,
thus during his 1st campaign, in year 22 (dated 1450 BCE), Thutmose III states that he
fought 330 rebel princes who were under the orders of the king of Kadesh and were thus
indirectly in the wake of the "prince of Naharina". Šauštatar I the king of Mitanni (also
called Hanigalbat) corresponds well to the biblical king of Aram-Naharaim called Cushanrishathaim in Judges 3:8-10. However, the word Aram-Naharani refers to a geographical
area (land), not ethnic or linguistic, because kings of Mitanni were of Indo-Aryan origin
and spoke Hurrian. The word paddan means "area" in Aramaic thus the name Paddan-Aram
(Gn 47:8) could be translated as "area of Arameans"447.
The area covered by the Mitanni during the 1500-1400 period was traveled by
Aramaean tribes who came from Lower Mesopotamia448. The term Aḫlamû "Arameans"
was used to designate nomadic enemies of Assyria449. Around 1350 BCE, the term Aḫlamû
(EA 200) was used to designate some rebels in the Nippur area450 under Burna-Buriaš II
(1360-1333). The Amarna letters use it under the form Naḫarima (EA 288), a syllabic
transcription of (Aram)-Naharaim, to designate a region also known by them as Mitanni
(Meten). If at the time of David (c. 1050 BCE) the "kings of Aram" could be called "kings
of Syria" (Damascus kingdom) four centuries earlier the area named Aram-Naharaim
covered mainly Upper Mesopotamia. For example: At this Jehovah’s anger blazed against Israel,
so that he sold them into the hand of Cushan-rishathaim the king of Aram-Naharaim and the sons of
Israel continued to serve Cushan-rishathaim 8 years. And the sons of Israel began to call to Jehovah for
T. SÄVE-SÖDERBERGH - The Navy of the Eighteenth Egyptian Dynasty
Uppsala 1946 Ed. Uppsala Universitets Arsskrift p. 39.
444 J.B. PRITCHARD - Ancient Near Eastern Texts
Princeton 1969 Ed. Princeton University Press pp. 242-243.
445 J. SIMONS – Handbook for the Study of Egyptian Topographical Lists Relating to Western Asia
Leiden 1937 Ed. E.J. Brill pp. 207-210.
446 J. FREU, R. LEBRUN – Histoire du Mitanni
Paris 2003 Éd. L'Harmattan pp. 40-51.
447 E. LIPINSKI – Paddân-Aram
in: Dictionnaire encyclopédique de la Bible (Brépols, 1987) p. 949.
448 F. JOANNÈS - Dictionnaire de la civilisation mésopotamienne
Paris 2001 Éd. Robert Laffont pp. 63-68.
449 D.D. LUCKENBILL – Ancient Records of Assyria and Babylonia I
Chicago 1926 Ed. University of Chicago Press §§ 73, 116, 166, 209.
450 R. DE VAUX - Histoire ancienne d'Israël des origines à l'installation en Canaan
Paris 1986 Éd. Gabalda pp.194-198.
A.T. CLAY – Documents from the Temple Archives of Nippur dated in the reigns of Cassite rulers
in: Babylonian Expedition (1906) Vol XIV p. 16; Vol XV pp. 44, 168.
443
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
aid. Then Jehovah raised a saviour up for the sons of Israel that he might save them, Othniel the son of
Kenaz the younger brother of Caleb. The spirit of Jehovah now came upon him, and he became the judge of
Israel. When he went out to battle, then Jehovah gave Cushan-rishathaim the king of Aram into his hand
so that his hand overpowered [not slaughtered] Cushan-rishathaim (Jg 3:8-10). Cushan-rishathaim,
the king of Aram-Naharaim (Mitanni), ruled the land of Israel from 1452 to 1444 BCE.
The name Cushan-rishataim was amended by derision because it means “Kushan of double
wickedness” in Hebrew451 (Jr 50:21), the transcription Khousarsatos (Kušaršata?) in the
Septuagint is closer to the name of Mitannian king Šauštatar I (1455-1435).
The Egyptian documents from Thutmose III's period and biblical texts both
provide convergent information: a powerful king of the kingdom called Naharine (or
Mitanni) led an aggressive expansionist policy towards the west around 1450 BCE.
Moreover, the region called Palestine (Upper Retenu) had little or no contact with their
neighbours at that time (Syria is called Lower Retenu).
Archaeologists claim that Shasu were
only a small tribe of nomads poorly localized,
but according to the Egyptian documents of
that time, they were at least several tens of
thousands and their country in Palestine was
considered as one of the nine enemy countries
of Egypt. For example, Amenhotep II's stele
(c. -1410) gives some ethnic information
through a list of prisoners: Great ones of Retenu
land 127; Brothers of the Great ones 179; Apiru
3600; living Shasu 15200; Ḫarru land (north
Canaan) 36300; living Nuhasse land (Syria) 15070,
their families 30652; total amount 89600 (sic)452. The high number of Shasu captured (some of
whom would serve later in the Egyptian army), half of Ḫarru (Canaanites), shows that
Shasu constituted a population of first magnitude at that time. It was not a small group of
families who emigrated to Palestine, but, as argued by the biblical text, a large group of
people. If the Egyptian text distinguishes Shasu and Apiru this does not prove that there
was no link between these two groups, because the terms Shasu and Apiru were not proper
names but common names. In the Amarna letters, the settlers conquering Palestine are
‘Apiru "refugees453" or Hapiru "migrants454", with the meaning "rebels455". The word
Habiru means "migrants" in Semitic languages456 hence its later meaning "wanderers". The
list of Amenhotep II can be understood: Factious (Apiru) 3600, Bedouins (Shasu) 15200. If
for Egyptians the Shasu, including those of Palestine, were perceived as wanderers, all
wanderers (or factious) were not Bedouins (Shasu). The biblical text itself states that the
cities that had been conquered by the Israelites remained very variegated: Manasseh did not
dispossess Beth-Shean and its dependencies, nor Taanach and its dependencies, nor the inhabitants of Dor
and its dependencies, nor the inhabitants of Ibleam and its dependencies, nor the inhabitants of Megiddo
M. GUICHARD – Kushân-rishéatayim
in: Dictionnaire encyclopédique de la Bible (Brepols, 1987) p. 724.
452 The number of living Nuhasseh is likely to be 3570 (as for Apiru) instead of 15070.
453 W.L. MORAN - Les lettres d'El Amarna in: LIPO n°13
Paris 1987 Éd. Cerf pp. 604-605.
454 M. GUICHARD - Les émigrés politiques au Proche-Orient ancien
in: Dossiers d'Archéologie n°300 février 2005 pp. 40-49.
455 N. NA’AMAN - Habiru and Hebrew: The transfer of a social Term to the Literary Sphere
in: Journal of Near Eastern Studies 45 (1986) pp. 271-288.
456 J.M. DURAND - Documents épistolaires du palais de Mari
in: LIPO n°18 Paris 2000 Éd. Cerf p. 205.
R. DE VAUX - Histoire ancienne d'Israël des origines à l'installation en Canaan
Paris 1986 Éd. Gabalda pp. 106-112, 202-208.
451
137
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THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
and its dependencies; in those parts the Canaanites held their ground (...) The Amorites held their ground
at Har-Heres and Shaalbim (Jg 1:27-35). According to figures from Amenhotep II' list, the
Shasu (shepherds of Palestine) were four times more numerous than the Apiru (factious or
outlaws). Once again the Egyptians met few Shasu as well as Syrians only in the northern
part of Palestine, however the Israelites at that place were mixed with Canaanites.
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
The aim of Amenhotep II's campaigns was to secure the major trade route called
“Via Maris” linking Egypt to Aleppo in Syria457. He therefore established some garrisons of
soldiers in Canaan to perform police operations. Amenhotep II (1420-1392) established a
number of garrison towns in Canaan such as: Gaza, Joppa, Beth-Shean, Ulaza, Sumur and
Ikathi (near Damascus?), Gaza being the most permanent one for defending the coastal
road to Egypt. Note that no garrison is located in Palestine (Upper Retenu) the land of
Shasu because Gaza and Joppa belong to Philistine territory, Beth-Shean (south of Hazor)
is north of Palestine (Lower Retenu), Kumidu belonged to Phoenician territory and Sumur
belongs to western Syria (Djahy). Egyptian records are in harmony with its biblical
counterpart which says that the land of Canaan had no disturbance for 40 years when
Othniel (1444-1404) was ruling as Judge (Jg 3:11). According to the biblical narrative, the
area inhabited by Israelites was not homogeneous (below).
The
obvious
proof that Egypt never
controlled
Upper
Retenu (Palestine), the
dwelling area of the
Israelites, after the
conquest of Canaan (in
1493 BCE) is the
complete disappearance
of the cities in this
region (hatched area),
such as: Aijalon, Tirzah,
Tappuah, Shiloh, Gilgal,
Bethel,
Gibeon,
Succoth,
Hebron,
Debir,
Beer-sheba,
Arad, etc., in the
campaigns
from
Thutmose I (in 1483
BCE) up to Shoshenq I
(in 972 BCE). How can
one explain such a
disappearance if Egypt
controlled Palestine as
most (if not all)
archaeologists
and
Egyptologists believe?
That
bias,
which
completely overshadows
the biblical testimony, is
unfortunately
widely
spread among current
historians and modify
interpretation of the
Egyptian events.
Y. AHARONI – Some Geographical Remarks concerning the Campaigns of Amenhotep II
in: Journal of Near Eastern Studies 19:3 (1960), pp. 177-183.
457
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A band of hieroglyphs carved above the heads of
the prisoners depicted on slab no. 21687 (opposite figure)
that reads: one, who is falling on his feet (...) ’Asqelûn (i-s-q-rw-n)
Kïna‘anû (k-ÿ-n-‘3-n-nw) ’Ašair (i-˹3˺-š3-i-r). As this spelling of
the city of Ashkelon is specific to the reign of Amenhotep
II458 it can be inferred that such recording describes the
coastal regions which were subjected during the campaign
of Year 9 against Aphek (ANET 246). Consequently, the
mysterious place called ’Ashair459 after Canaan and around
Aphek must be ’Asher (Jg 1:31, 5:17). In addition, one
reads: So the Asherites continued to dwell among the Canaanites
inhabiting the land, because they did not drive them out (Jg 1:32).
Despite the fact that the conquest of Canaan by the Israelites is dated around 1500
BCE, which is confirmed by archaeology460 through the destruction of several big cities in
Palestine during the Late Bronze Age IA (1550-1470), archaeologists refuse to make a link
with the biblical account as Pierre Grandet explains461: Archaeology seems to reveal a wave of
destruction and abandonment of most urban centres in Canaan during the transition from the final phase of
the Middle Bronze Age to the Late Bronze, is to count off, between the beginning of the New Kingdom and
the end of the XVIIIth Dynasty (1550-1292). Unfortunately, in the absence of written documentation, the
reasons for such a phenomenon, its exact nature, its geographical expansion and to its specific date, remain
a matter of debate. Some archaeologists date the destruction of the period immediately following the
expulsion of the Hyksos, but the silence of texts and the relative indifference of Egypt towards Asia at this
time is not in favour of this theory. However, the presence of Hapiru (“Hebrews”, the word is
written SA.GAZ and means “wanderer”) in Canaan is mentioned462 by King Idrimi during
his stay463 with them (1487-1480?). Egyptians performed several campaigns in SyriaPalestine, soon after 1500 BCE, in fact simple police operations against Canaanite cities of
the region (mainly in the Mitanni and not in Lower Retenu, the Hebrews area) to remind
them their state of vassalage. If the Egyptian frescoes, in the 15th century BCE, portrayed
the Syrians under the features of a vassal people464, they simply disparage the "vile" Shasu
without explaining their exact status in the region. The Amarna letters show that during the
14th century there were many disturbances in Palestine. This confused situation would
explain why Egyptian raids in Palestine are not mentioned in the biblical text, while many
cities became Canaanite (or Amorite) again after the death of Joshua (Jg 1:10-36). The area
occupied by the Israelites in Palestine hardly concerned the Mediterranean coast, as the
south was occupied by the Philistines and the north by the Phoenicians. The Pharaohs led
some campaigns in Asia, they mainly concerned Mitanni or the north of Canaan, but never
the south of Palestine. In addition, when they entered the area of Israel (north of Palestine),
it was only in periods when this area was under foreign domination.
The only period during which Palestine is well documented comes from the letters
preserved by the Egyptian chancellery in El-Amarna. Although this period is very short
(1360-1330) it illuminates the relationships between the various rulers in Canaan.
A. MAZAR - Archaeology of the Land of the Bible, 10000-586 BCE
New York 1990 Ed. Doubleday pp. 224-242.
459 Some scholars transcribe this name “Yasrail” but Semitic names beginning with i-3- in Egyptian are always vocalized ’A- not Ya-.
460 P. VAN DER VEEN, C. THEIS, M. GÖRG - Israel in Canaan (Long) Before Pharaoh Merenptah? A Fresh Look at Berlin Statue Pedestal
Relief 21687 in: Journal of Ancient Egyptian Interconnections Vol. 2:4 (2010), pp. 15-25.
461 P. GRANDET – Les pharaons du Nouvel Empire : une pensée stratégique
Paris 2008 Éd. du Rocher pp. 112-114.
462 E.L. GREENSTEIN, D. MARCUS – The Akkadian Inscription of Idrimi
in: Journal of the Association of Near-Eastern Studies 8 (1976) pp. 59-96.
463 The fatal incident that forced Idrimi to leave Aleppo is the attack of his city (in 1500 BCE) by Mursili I (1510-1500), a king of Hatti.
464 J. B. PRITCHARD - The Ancient Near East in Pictures
Princeton 1969 Ed. Princeton University Press pp. 15-17.
458
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
WHY THE SHASU (ISRAELITES) ARE NEVER MENTIONED IN AMARNA LETTERS?
Given that Amarna letters never speak of Shasu (Israelites), but only sometimes of
Apiru (factious), most scholars have concluded that all Canaanite rulers in Palestine had
been controlled by Egypt. The only major change had been the annexation of Syria by the
Hittite empire (in 1348 BCE), which was previously controlled by the Mitannian kingdom.
This interpretation, widely accepted465, which represents Egypt as controlling the
whole of Canaan (above images) is however contrary to the contents of the letters coming
from the Egyptian chancellery. The data provided by the Amarna state correspondence
thus clearly imply a narrow link between the military and economic sphere with direct
military interventions taking place only when the economic priorities of the Egyptian
administrative system became affected or endangered466. Contrary to the Hittite empire the
goal of Egyptian military interventions in Canaan was not to conquer new territories, or to
control them, but to secure economic relationships among its client rulers in Canaan. The
diplomatic correspondence shows that alliances between Egypt and its allies (Amorite and
Mitannian kingdoms, Phoenician and Philistine state-cities, Canaanite mayors in the
western coast of Palestine), were primarily economic in nature, not political. Egyptian
Military manpower corresponds to garrisons of a few hundred policemen467 rather than
battalions of thousand of soldiers. In addition, Egyptian correspondence is biased because
there are no documents coming from the Hittite chancellery (rival empire), no Shasu
documents (nation in peace with no relationship with Egypt) and no letters from Egyptian
commissioners (written on papyrus which disappeared).
Letters of Amarna mainly show the panic reaction in Canaan generated by the
annexation of Syria. The king of Mitanni pleaded with the king of Egypt for a military
intervention in order to recover part of his kingdom conquered by the Hittites, without
success. The king of Amurru tried to prove his loyalty to Egypt but at the same time, for
W.H. VAN SOLDT – The Extent of Literacy in Syria and Palestine during the Second Millenium B.C.E.
in: Time and History in the Ancient Near East (Eisenbrauns, 2013), pp. 19-28.
466 J. MYNÁŘ OVÁ – Egypt among the Great Powers and its relations to the neighbouring vassal kingdoms in the Southern Levant
in: Policies of Exchange: Political Systems and Modes of Interaction in the Aegean and the Near East in the 2nd Millennium BC (OREA 2), pp. 155–163.
467 200 infantrymen (EA 71); 400 men (EA 76); 300 men (EA 93); 200 archers (EA 95); 80 soldiers (EA 152); 50 men (EA 238).
465
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THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
pragmatic reasons of real politic, began to negotiate new alliances with the king of Hatti.
Because of the chaotic and uncertain situation, several Amorite mayors as well as some
former Mitannian mayors established new alliances with the King of Hatti and were
consequently called Apiru “factious” by Canaanite mayors who had remained loyal to
Egypt. Finally, some Canaanite mayors like those of Shechem and Hazor took advantage of
the chaos in Palestine to extort other Canaanite cities by making raids to get booty and
consequently were also called Apiru “factious”. This led Israel Finkelstein468 to reinterpret
(drawing below) the data provided by the letters of Amarna and propose, instead of an
Egyptian control of Palestine, a struggle between two Canaanite blocks: a Shechem
coalition in the south (light gray) and an anti-Shechem coalition in the north (dark gray).
Finkelstein's interpretation shows two crucial points: 1) Egypt did not have control
of Palestine and 2) despite the short period 1360-1330 BCE being of the best documented
about Canaan, Palestine and Egypt (almost 400 letters), several parts remain controversial469
because of the following:
Most protagonists are rarely mentioned by name but almost exclusively by their title
(king, mayor) or function (ruler, commissioner).
The boundaries of some small countries (Amurru, Palestine) have been very volatile.
Transcription of Egyptian names into Akkadian470 is often quite confusing471.
I. FINKELSTEIN – The Forgotten Kingdom. The Archaeology and History of Northern Israel
Atlanta 2013, Ed. Society of Biblical Literature, pp. 13-19.
469 D. KAHN – One Step Forward, Two Steps Backward: The Relations between Amenhotep III and Tushratta, King of Mitanni
in: Egypt, Canaan and Israel: History, Imperialism, Ideology and Literature (Brill, 2011) pp. 136-152.
470 A. DODSON – Were Nefertiti & Tutankhamen Coregents?
in: KMT a Modern Journal of Ancient Egypt n° 20:3 (2009) p. 48.
471 For example (Egyptian / Akkadian): Thutmose III (Menkheperre / Manakhpiya); Amenhotep III (Nebmaatre / Ni[b]muariya); Akhenaten
(Neferkheperure / Napkhuriya); Tutankhamun (Nebkheperure / Nibkhuriya); Semenkhkare (Ankhkheperure / [Nip] Khuriya).
The land of Mitanni (Hittite) is called Meteni (Egyptian), Ḫanigalbat (Assyrian), Aram-Naharaim (Hebrew), Naharina "[between the] rivers
[Tigris and Euphrates]" (Babylonian), Neherine (Egyptian), Mesopotamia "between rivers" (Greek). The people of Mitanni are called Ḫurri.
468
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
It is difficult to distinguish ethnic vs common names, but a link exists between them472.
In Egyptian473: ‘Aperu "crew members/workmen", Šasu "Bedouins", ‘A[r]amu "Asiatics";
in Babylonian: ‘Apiru "factious474", Ḫapiru SA.GAZ "nomads", Ḫabiru "migrants", Aḫlamaiu
"Arameans"; in Hebrew: ‘Ibrim "Hebrews/those of Eber", ‘eber means migrant! These
terms often refer to people in the same place at the same time.
Canaanite mayors all accuse each other of treachery to the pharaoh (who are the liars?).
There were several simultaneous wars: 1) Hatti against Mitanni (ally of Egypt) then
against Amurru (former ally of Egypt); 2) Apiru mercenaries (EA 195) around Amurru's
area in the North and around Shechem's area in the South against Canaanite kings.
Canaan appears at this time as a sort of protectorate under the power of pharaohs.
Each king, wren, or town mayor, had to swear allegiance to the pharaoh and take into
account the requirements of the latter who secured his power in the land by sending his
representatives on the spot accompanied by a police escort of a few hundred archers.
These letters reveal a generally peaceful international environment with the exception of
two areas of conflict, one in the region around the land of Amurru and another in the area
around the town of Shechem.
Nearly one-quarter of the letters are from Rib-Hadda, the mayor of Byblos. The
politics of Rib-Hadda's Byblos were dominated by the emergence of a major power in
Amurru with ‘Abdi-Aširta and the aggression of Šuppiluliuma I, King of Hatti. With Sumur
captured and Byblos virtually besieged, Amenhotep IV was obliged to summon the ruler of
Amurru, Aziru, to court, where he was detained for several months. Subsequently,
however, Aziru stepped up the pressure on Byblos and switched his allegiance to the King
of Hatti. The politics of Palestine, on the other hand, were dominated by local powergames in which Egypt intervened as little as possible. However, the raiding of Lab’ayu and
his sons near Megiddo was one local irritation which grew into a threat to trade. Avoiding
direct intervention, Amenholep IV demanded that a group of Palestinian city-states put
aside their own differences and co-operate in order to eliminate Lab’ayu (and protect the
trade routes with the minimum of direct intervention). Key areas of conflict475:
The term ‘Apiru (“factious”) is used with a slightly different meaning to the north
and south. For example, Biryawaza, the mayor of Kumidu (in the north), wrote to the
Egyptian king: I am indeed, together with my troops and chariots, together with my brothers [soldiers from
Kumidu], my ‘Apiru [Canaanite mercenaries from Amurru] and my Suteans [Syrian mercenaries from
Mitanni], at the disposition of the archers [Egyptian soldiers], wheresoever the king [of Egypt], my lord,
shall order (me to go) (EA 195). These mercenaries were involved in police operations and not
in a war because of the numbers involved476. Thus Rib-Hadda, the mayor of Byblos wrote:
What is ‘Abdi-Aširta [king of Amurru], servant and dog, that he takes the land of the king himself?
What is his auxiliary forces that it is strong? Through the ‘Apiru his auxiliary force is strong! So send me
50 pairs of horses and 200 infantry that I may resist him in Šigata until the coming forth of the archers
(EA 71). The ‘Apiru of ‘Abdi-Aširta (King of Amurru) were factious from Amurru and the
‘Apiru of Lab‘ayu, the mayor of Shechem, were factious from the area around Shechem:
Message of Biridiya [Mayor of Megiddo] (...) The two sons of Lab‘ayu have indeed gave the money to the
‘Apiru and to the Suteans in order to wage war against me (EA 246).
W.L. MORAN - Les lettres d'El Amarna
in: LIPO n°13 Paris 1987 Éd. Cerf pp. 569, 604-605.
473 R.O. FAULKNER – A Concise Dictionary of Middle Egyptian
Oxford 2002, Ed. Griffith Institute pp. 38, 42, 261.
474 In Middle Assyrian apâru/epêru means "put crown on the head", see: A Concise Dictionary of Akkadian (Harrassowitz Verlag, 2000)
pp. 19,99. In Amarna letters Apiru are compared to: a runaway dog (EA 67); mercenaries (EA 71); a rebel (EA 288); robbers (EA 318).
In Akkadian Ḫapirû/Ḫabbâtu luSA.GAZ means "nomads/looters", see Manuel d'épigraphie akkadienne (Geuthner , 1999) p. 87.
475 B. MANLEY – Historical Atlas of Ancient Egypte
London 1996 Ed. Penguin Books pp. 80-81.
476 For example: Zitana [a Hittite General] has come and there are 90,000 infantrymen that have come with him (EA 170).
472
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The term Ḫapiru/‘Apiru was also used to designate the inhabitants of Palestine477, a
country that was at peace! For example, ‘Abdi-Ḫeba, the mayor of Jerusalem, wrote: What
have I done to the king, my lord'? They denounce me: (I am slandered) before the king, my lord: ‘AbdiḪeba has rebelled against the king, his lord. Seeing that, as far as I am concerned, neither my father nor my
mother put me in this place, but the strong arm of the king brought me into my father's house, why should I
of all people commit a crime against the king, my lord? As truly as the king, my lord, lives, I say to the
commissioner of the king, my lord: Why do you love the ‘Apiru but hate the mayors? Accordingly, I am
slandered before the king, my lord. Because I say: Lost are the lands of the king, my lord, accordingly I am
slandered before the king, my lord. May the king, my lord, know that (though) the king, my lord, stationed
a garrison (here) [Now], O king, my lord, [there is n]o garrison, [and so] may the king provide for his
land. May the king provide for his land! All the lands of the king, my lord, have deserted. Ili-Milku
[mayor of Gezer] has caused the loss of all the land of the king, and so may the king, my lord, provide for
his land. For my part, I say: I would go in to the king, my lord, and visit the king, my lord, but the war
against me is severe, and so I am not able to go in to the king, my lord. And may it seem good in the sight
of the king, [and] may he send a garrison so I may go in and visit the king, my lord. In truth, the king, my
lord, lives: whenever the commissioners have come out, I would say (to them): Lost are the lands of the king,
but they did not listen to me. Lost are all the mayors; there is not a mayor remaining to the king, my lord.
May the king turn his attention to the archers so that archers of the king, my lord, come forth. The king
has no lands. (That) ‘Apiru [Ili-Milku] has plundered all the lands of the king. If there are archers this
year, the lands of the king, my lord, will remain. But if there are no archers, lost are the lands of the king,
my lord (EA 286). Consider] the entire affair. [Milkilu and Tagi brou]ght [troop]s into [Keilah] against
me. [Consider] the deed that they did [to your servant] (...) May the king know (that) all the lands are [at]
peace (with one another), but I am at war. May the king provide for his land. Consider the lands of Gezer,
Ashkelon, and Lachish. They have given them food, oil, and any other requirement. So may the king
provide for archers and send the archers against men that commit crimes against the king, my lord. If this
year there are archers, then the lands and the mayors will belong to the king, my lord. But if there are no
archers, then the king will have neither lands nor mayors. Consider Jerusalem! This neither my father nor
my mother gave to me. The strong hand: (arm) [of the king] gave it to me. Consider the deed! This is the
deed of Milkilu [ruler of Gezer] and the deed of the sons of Lab‘ayu [rulers of Shechem], who have given
the land of the king (to) the ‘Apiru. Consider, O king, my lord! I am in the right! With regard to the
Kašites (Kushites?), may the king make inquiry of the commissioners. Though the house is well fortified,
they attempted a very serious crime. They took their tools, and I bad to seek shelter by a support for the
roof. A[nd so i]f he is going to send [troop]s into [Jerusalem], let them come with [a garrison for] (regular)
service. May the king provide for them; [all] of the land might be in dire straits on their account. May the
king inquire about the[m. Let there be] much food, much oil, much clothing, until Pauru, the commissioner
of the king, comes up to Jerusalem. Gone is Addaya together with the garrison of soldiers [that] the king
provided. May the king know (that) Addaya said to me: Behold, he has dismissed me. Do not abandon it,
[and] send this [year] a garrison, and send right here the commissioner of the king. I sent [as gift]s to the
king, my lord, [x] prisoners, 5000 [... and ...]8 porters for the caravans of the k[ing, my lord], but they
have been taken in the countryside of Aijalon. May the king, my lord, know (that) I am unable to send a
caravan to the king, my lord. For your information! As the king has placed his name in Jerusalem forever,
he cannot abandon it —the land of Jerusalem. Say to the scribe of the king, my lord: Message of ‘AbdiḪeba, your servant. I fall at (your) feet. I am your servant. Present eloquent words to the king, my lord: I
am a soldier of the king. I am always yours. And please make the Kašites responsible for the evil deed. I
was almost killed by the Kašites in my own house. May the king [make an inquiry] in their regard. [May
the kin]g, my lord, [provide] for them (EA 287). It is, therefore, impious what they have done to me.
Behold, I am not a mayor; I am a soldier of the king, my lord. Behold, I am a friend of the king and a
tribute-bearer of the king. It was neither my father nor my mother, but the strong arm of the king chat
477
In addition, several cities bear the same name like Rehob (Jos 19:28-30), Aphek (Jos 12:18; 13:4; 19:30; 1Ki 20:26), etc.
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
placed me in the house of [my] father (...) May the king give thought to his land; the land of the king is
lost. All of it has attacked me, I am at war as far as the land of Šeru (Seir) and as far as Ginti-kirmil
(Gath of Carmel). All the mayors are at peace, but I am at war. I am treated like an ‘Apiru, and I do
not visit the king, my lord, since I am at war. I am situated like a ship in the midst of the sea. The strong
hand (arm) of the king took the land of Naḫrima (Mitanni) and the land of Kasi (Kush), but now the
‘Apiru have taken the very cities of the king. Not a single mayor remains to the king, my lord; all are lost.
Behold, Turbazu was slain in the city gate of Silu. The king did nothing. Behold, servants who were joined
to the ‘Apiru smote Zimredda of Lachish, and Yaptiḫ-Hadda was slain in the city gate of Silu. The king
did nothing. Why has he not called them to account? May the king provide for his land and may he see to it
that archers [come ou]t to his land. If there are no archers this year, all the lands of the king, my lord, are
lost. They have not reported to the king that the lands of the king, my lord, are lost and all the mayors lost.
If there are no archers this year, may the king send a commissioner to fetch me, me along with my brothers,
and then we will die near the king, our lord (EA 288). Milkilu does not break away from the sons of
Lab‘ayu and from the sons of Arsawa, as they desire the land of the king for themselves. As for a mayor
who does such a deed, why does the king not call him to account? Such was the deed that Milkilu and Tagi
did: they took Rubutu. And now as for Jerusalem, if this land belongs to the king, why is it (not) of concern
to the king like Gaza (Ḫazattu)? Gath of Carmel (Ginti-kirmil) belongs to Tagi, and men of Gath
(Gimti) are the garrison in Beth-Shean (Bitsani). Are we to act like Lab‘ayu when he was giving the land
of Shechem (Sakmu) to the Ḫapiru? Milkilu has written to Tagi and the sons [of Lab‘ayu]: Be the both of
you a protection. Grant all their demands to the men of Keilah, and let us isolate Jerusalem. Addaya has
taken the garrison that you sent in the charge of Haya, the son of Miyare; he has stationed it in his own
house in Gaza and has sent 20 men to Egypt. May the king, my lord, know (that) no garrison of the king
is with me. Accordingly, as truly as the king lives, his irpi-official, Pu’uru, has left me and is in Gaza.
(May the king call this to mind when he arrives) and so may the king send 50 men as a garrison to protect
the land. The entire land of the king has deser[ted] (EA 289). Here is the deed against the land that
Milkilu and Šuardatu did: against the land of the king, my lord, they hired troops from Gezer, troops from
Gath, and troops from Keilah. They seized Rubutu. The land of the king deserted to the Ḫapiru. And
now, besides this, a town belonging to Jerusalem, Bit-dNIN.URTA478 by name, a city of the king, has gone
over to the side of the men of Keilah. May the king give heed to ‘Abdi-Ḫeba, your servant, and send archers
to restore the land of the king to the king. If there are no archers, the land of the king will desert to the
Ḫapiru. This deed against the land was at the order of Milki[lu and a]t the order of Suardatu, [together
w]ith Gath (EA 290).
Letters of ‘Abdi-Ḫeba, the mayor of Jerusalem, describe a situation similar to that of
Rib-Hadda, the mayor of Byblos, however, the areas involved are very different as well the
leaders of the insurrection. Thus, northern Canaan was annexed by ‘Abdi-Aširta (its former
mayors had to pay him tribute), the king of Amurru, thanks to his ‘Apiru, most were
Amorite factious, and northern Palestine was bullied by Lab‘ayu (then his sons afterwards),
the mayor of Shechem, thanks to his ‘Apiru, most were Canaanite factious, however the
south of Palestine was a country in Ḫapiru's hands (Hebrews). Moreover, the war in
northern Canaan is quite dramatic because many Canaanite mayors were killed whereas the
war in the north of Palestine looks more like an insurgency accompanied by racketeering.
Rib-Hadda, the king of Byblos, wrote: Why have you been negligent, not speaking to the king, your
lord, so that you may come out together with archers and fall upon the land of Amurru? If they hear of
archers coming out, they will abandon their cities and desert. Do not you yourself know that the land of
Amurru follows the stronger party? Look, they are not now being friendly to ‘Abdi-Aširta. What will he
do to them? [And so] they are longing day and night for the coming out of the archers, and (they say), "Let
us join them!" All the mayors long for this to be done to ‘Abdi-Aširta, since he sent a message to the men
of Ammiya, "Kill your lord and join the ‘Apiru. Accordingly, the mayors say, "He will do the same thing
478
The name means "House of Ninurta [Assyrian god of war]", maybe a translation of Kiriath-Baal "City of Baal" (Jos 15:9,60).
145
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to us, and all the lands will be joined to the ‘Apiru (EA 73). The war, however, of the ‘Apiru against me
is severe. (Our) sons and daughters and the furnishings of the houses are gone, since they have been sold [in]
the land of Yarimuta for our provisions to keep us alive. For the lack of a cultivator, my field is like a
woman without a husband. I have written repeatedly to the palace because of the illness afflicting me, [but
there is no one] who has looked at the words that [keep arr]iving. [May the king] give heed [to] the words
of [his] servant. [...] The ‘Apiru killed Ad[una, the king] of Arkite, but there was no one who said
anything to ‘Abdi-Aširta, and so they go on taking (territory for themselves). Miya, the ruler of Arašni,
seized Ardata, and just now the men of Ammiya have killed their lord. I am afraid. May the king be
informed that the king of Hatti has seized all the countries that were vassals of the king of Mittani.
Behold, [he] is king of Nahrima [and] the land of the Great Kings, [and] ‘Abdi-Aširta, [the servant] and
dog, is tak[ing the land of the king] (EA 75). May the king, my lord, know that the war of ‘Abdi-Aširta
against me is severe. He wants to take [for himself] the two cities that have remained to me. Moreover, what
is ‘Abdi-Aširta, the dog, that he strives to take all the cities of the king, the Sun, for himself? Is he the
king of Mittani, or the king of Kaššu (Babylonia), that he strives to take the land of the king for himself?
He has just gathered together all the ‘Apiru against Sigata [and] Ampi, and he himself has taken these
two cities. I said: There is no place where men can enter against him. He has seized (...) [so] send me [a
garris]on of 400 men a[nd x pairs of horses (...) out to inspect [the coun]try, and yet now that the land of
the king and Sumur, your garrison-city, have been joined to the ‘Apiru, you have done nothing. Send a
large force of archers that it may drive out the king's enemies and all lands be joined to the king (EA 76).
Be informed that since Amanappa reached me, all the ‘Apiru have at the urging of ‘Abdi-Aširta turned
against me. May my lord heed the words of his servant. Send me a garrison to guard the city of the king
until the archers come out. If there are no archers, then all lands will be joined to the ‘Apiru. Listen! Since
Bit-Arha was seized [at] the urging of ‘Abdi-Aširta, they have as a result been striving to take over Byblos
and Batruna, and thus all lands would be joined to the ‘Apiru. There are two towns that remain to me,
and they want to take them from the king. May my lord send a garrison to his two towns until the archers
come out, and may something be given to me for their food. I have nothing at all. Like a bird in a trap
(cage), so am I in Byblos. Moreover, if [the kin]g is unable to save me from his enemies, [then al]l lands
will be joined to ‘Abdi-Aširta. [What is h]e, the dog, that [he ta]kes the lands of the king for himself?
(EA 79). Repeatedly to you: The war is against Ardat, against Irqat, and against [..., an]d Ammiy[a
and Sigat]a, loyal cities of the king, [but the king], my lord, [has done nothing]. Moreover, what is [he,
‘Abdi-Aširta, the servant (and) dog, that he has acted as he pleased in the lands of my lord, [and yet] the
king, my lord, has done nothing for [his] servant? Moreover, I sent my messenger (each time) that he took
my cities and moved up against me. Now he has taken Batruna, and he has moved up against me. Behold
the city! He has ... the entrance of the gate of Byblos. How long has he not moved from the gate, and so we
are unable to go out into the countryside. Moreover, look, he strives to seize Byblos! And [... and] may the
king, my lord, give heed t[o the words of] his servant, and [may] he hasten [with] all speed chariots and
[troops] that they may gu[ard the city of the king], my lord, and [... until] the arrival of the king, [my]
lord. For my part, I will not neglect the word of [my] lord. But i[f the k]ing, my lord, does [not give heed]
to the words of [his] ser[vant], then Byblos will be joined to him, and all the lands of the king, as far as
Egypt, will be joined to the ‘Apiru. Moreover, should my lord not have word brought to his servant by
tablet, with all speed, then ... the city to him and I will request a town from him to stay in, and so I will
stay alive (EA 88). There was war against the[m, but] a garrison [of the king] was with them. There were
provisions from the king at their disposal. [Though the war against me] is severe. I have no [provisions from
the king or gar]ri[son of the king]. Wh[at shall I] do? As for the mayors, they are the ones who strike our
city. They are like dogs, and there is no one who wants to serve them. What am I, who live among ‘Apiru,
to do? If now there are no provisions from the king for me, my peasantry is going to fight (against me). All
lands are at war against me. If the desire of the king is to guard his city and his servant, send a garrison to
guard the city. I will guard it while I am alive. When I die, who is going to guard it? (EA 130).
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
The ‘Apiru in service to ‘Abdi-Aširta, who was King of Amurru, are different from
those associated with Lab‘ayu, Mayor of Shechem. Amurru was an unreliable kingdom
vassal of Egypt and its king led a secession war through Amorite factious on a large scale
(north of Canaan). Shechem was an unreliable town vassal of Egypt and its mayor led a
small insurgency around the town through some raids by Canaanite mercenaries. Two areas
were little affected by these conflicts: the kingdom of Hazor in central Canaan and
southern Palestine inhabited by people called Hapiru "Hebrews". The equivalence Hapiru
= Hebrews is complicated by the mix of people in Palestine and the fact that many cities
conquered by Joshua became in time Canaanite again (partially or fully). For example: And
the sons of Israel dwelt in among the Canaanites, the Hittites and the Amorites and the Perizzites and the
Hivites and the Jebusites. And they proceeded to take their daughters as wives for themselves, and their own
daughters they gave to their sons, and they took up serving their gods (Jg 3:5-6). As for the Jebusites who
were dwelling in Jerusalem479, the sons of Judah were not able to drive them away; and the Jebusites continue
dwelling with the sons of Judah in Jerusalem down to this day (Jos 15:63). And they did not drive away
the Canaanites who were dwelling in Gezer, and the Canaanites continue dwelling in among Ephraim
down to this day and came to be subject to slavish forced labor (Jos 16:10). And Manasseh did not take
possession of Beth-Shean and its dependent towns and Taanach and its dependent towns and the
inhabitants of Dor and its dependent towns and the inhabitants of Ibleam and its dependent towns and the
inhabitants of Megiddo and its dependent towns, but the Canaanites persisted in dwelling in this land. And
it came about that Israel grew strong and proceeded to set the Canaanites to forced labor, and they did not
drive them out completely. Neither did Ephraim drive out the Canaanites who were dwelling in Gezer, but
the Canaanites continued to dwell in among them in Gezer. Zebulun did not drive out the inhabitants of
Kitron and the inhabitants of Nahalol, but the Canaanites continued to dwell in among them and came to
be subject to forced labor. Asher did not drive out the inhabitants of Akko and the inhabitants of Sidon
and Ahlab and Achzib and Helbah and Aphik and Rehob. And the Asherites continued to dwell in
among the Canaanites inhabiting the land, because they did not drive them out. Naphtali did not drive out
the inhabitants of Beth-shemesh and the inhabitants of Beth-anath, but they continued to dwell in among
the Canaanites inhabiting the land; and the inhabitants of Beth-shemesh and of Beth-anath became theirs
for forced labor. And the Amorites kept pressing the sons of Dan into the mountainous region, for they did
not allow them to come down into the low plain. So the Amorites persisted in dwelling in Mount Heres and
in Aijalon and Shaalbim. But the hand of the house of Joseph got to be so heavy that they were forced into
task work. And the territory of the Amorites was from the ascent of Akrabbim, from Sela upward (Jg
1:27-36). Several Hebrew cities became Canaanite again a little while later: In time Abimelech
the son of Jerubbaal went to Shechem to the brothers of his mother and began speaking to them and to all
the family of the house of his mother’s father, saying: Speak, please, in the hearing of all the landowners of
Shechem: Which is better for you, for seventy men, all the sons of Jerubbaal, to rule over you or for one man
to rule over you? And you must remember that your bone and your flesh I am. So the brothers of his mother
began speaking all these words about him in the hearing of all the landowners of Shechem so that their heart
inclined toward Abimelech, for they said: He is our own brother. Then they gave him seventy pieces of silver
from the house of Baal-berith, and with them Abimelech proceeded to hire idle and insolent men, that they
might accompany him. After that he went to the house of his father at Ophrah and killed his brothers, the
sons of Jerubbaal, seventy men, upon one stone, but Jotham the youngest son of Jerubbaal was left over,
because he had hid. Subsequently all the landowners of Shechem and all the house of Millo gathered together
and went and made Abimelech reign as king [ruler], close by the big tree, the pillar that was in Shechem
(Jg 9:1-6). Considering all this information it is possible to reconstruct several zones of
influence in Palestine during the period 1365-1345:
The execration texts (c. 1950 BCE) report the name [U]rusalimum "City of Salem" in accordance with the biblical text (Gn14:18; Heb
7:1) placing the name at the time of Abraham. The name Yebus (Jg 19:10) which means "trample" is not attested but Mari texts (c. 1800
BCE) experiencing Amorite anthroponym Yabusi'um. A Amorite clan "those of Yabusi" would therefore have been settled in Jerusalem
(E. LIPINSKI Itineraria Phoenicia in: Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 127 (2004) Peeters p. 502).
479
147
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
148
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
The area inhabited by the Ḫapiru “Nomads” in Palestine was substantially the same
as the land of Shasu “Bedouins” described by Egyptian letters. This area of Palestine
escaped the rulership of Egypt, since the Commissioner of Sumur was responsible only for
the land of Amurru480 (from Byblos to the south of Ugarit and inward up to Orontes). The
Commissioner of Kumidu administered Apu country (around Damascus), a territory from
Kadesh, in southern Syria, to Hazor in the north of Palestine, and from the Damascus area
to the northern Transjordan. Finally, the Commissioner of Gaza controlled Canaan, except
the land of Shasu (Palestine), and a part of the Phoenician coast, probably up to Beirut481.
Another proof that Egypt did not control Palestine is the complete disappearance of many
Israelite cities of the region, such as: Tirzah, Tappuah, Shiloh, Gilgal, Bethel, Gibeon,
Succoth, Hebron, Debir, Beer-sheba, Arad, etc. The Shasu (Israelites) are never mentioned
The Amurru is mentioned in the Mari letters (to -1700) as southern neighbor of Qatna's kingdom. It was perhaps a federation of
several cities, the most important seems to have been Hazor. The Damascus region (Apu country) may have belonged to this group.
After 1340 BCE, the Amurru (which the capital is not known) becomes a vassal kingdom of Hatti.
481 W.L. MORAN - Les lettres d'El Amarna
in: LIPO n°13 Paris 1987 Éd. Cerf pp. 34-35.
480
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
in Amarna letters, because they were oppressed by the king of Hazor (1366-1346) at that
time, according to the Bible (Jg 4:1-24). The city of Hazor was probably a vassal of the
kingdom of Mitanni, which was itself an ally of Egypt. However if the Shasu are not
quoted in Amarna letters they are regularly portrayed (below) in Amarna tombs482:
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Shasu regularly appear with beards, hairstyles and clothes which are substantially
identical to those worn by the Hyksos (Bedouins from Edom) represented on a wall at
Beni-Hassan. This hairstyle (above), like the one of Syrians or Shasu from Edom, with a
headband encircling the head was a characteristic attribute. Egyptian art represented
variations in Shasu hairstyles (headband), it was so not for the representatives of other
nations. Some features are identical to the biblical descriptions. In addition to their
R. GIVEON - Les bédouins Shosou des documents égyptiens
Leiden 1971 Ed. E.J. Brill pp. 31-34, pl. II & III.
482
149
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
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THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
characteristic hair, a detail deserves special note: these Shasu soldiers are clothed in fringes
decorated with tassels. According to the biblical text, Moses commanded the Israelites,
after they arrived in Palestine to hove the frayed edges parts of their clothing and tassels at
the four corners of these garments (Nb 15:38-40; Dt 22:12). This coincidence confirms the
identification of Shasu with the Israelites of the Bible483.
According to the reports from some Canaanite mayors, the Apiru were becoming a
threat to Egypt: The ‘Apiru have taken the entire country (...) if the king, my lord, does [not give heeds]
to the words of his servant, while Gubla [Byblos] will joined to him, and all the lands of the king, as far as
Egypt, will be joined to the ‘Apiru (EA 83, 88). It seems however that the messages of this
vassal king in the north of Canaan showed more posturing than real war, as he also wrote:
what am I, I who live among ‘Apiru, to do? (...) All lands are at war against me (EA 130). What
complicates an accurate identification is the multiplicity of ethnic groups in the same place:
the son of Israel dwelt among the Canaanites, the Hittites, the Amorites, the Perrizites, the Hivites and the
Yebusites (Jg 3:5). The city of Jerusalem remained in the hands of Yebusites (Jos 15:63). It is
noteworthy that Mari texts (c. -1800) contain Amorite anthroponym Yabusi’um. The name
Yebus (Jg 19:10) means “He will trample” in Hebrew. An Amorite clan "those of Yabusi"
must therefore have been settled in Jerusalem484. Campaigns of Pharaohs have always
avoided the area of the Shasu which extended into the western plains of Jericho and
corresponded to the area indicated by the text of Joshua 4:13. The area of Apiru was
smaller than the entire Retenu, however Egyptian domination in Northern Palestine was
episodic and may be more theoretical than real485.
The events described in the Amarna letters are consistent with those of the biblical
text: Palestine is occupied by the Hebrews (Hapiru/ Shasu), the south is at peace with its
neighbours and is slightly administered (not ruled, by the judge Ehud) and the north of the
country is oppressed (and racketed)486 by the powerful king of Hazor via his commanderin-chief: Sisera. Despite the crucial role of the Hapiru in Palestine487, the Amarna letters
never mention their ruler, which could be explained by the fact that Barak was only a judge
or a counsellor. Amazingly, that case raises a huge problem because although the king of
Hazor was the most powerful king of Canaan (he was the only Canaanite ruler to bear the
title of king) he appeared not to intervene in conflicts, in addition, he disappeared for no
apparent reason at the time of the ‘Apiru's war and was replaced by a mayor (Abdi-Tirši),
not by a king! Some scholars to explain the surprising absence of the powerful king of
Hazor during this period assume he was in the orbit and protection of the king of
Mitanni488. However this assumption is contradicted by the situation drawn up by Addunirari, the last king of Nuḫašše (Syria), whose kingdom was annexed by Šuppiluliuma I: To
the Sun, the king, my lord, the king of Egypt [Amenhotep III]: Message of Addu-nirari, your servant. I
fall at the feet of my lord. Note (that) when Manaḫpiya [Thutmose III], the king of Egypt, your ancestor,
made Takku, my ancestor, a king in Nuḫašše [c. -1450], he put oil on his head and spoke as follows:
Whom the king of Egypt has made a king (...) And now, (...) And the king of Hatti (wrote to me about
W.G. DEVER - Aux origines d'Israël. Quand la Bible dit vrai
Paris 2003 Éd. Bayard p. 167.
A. F. RAINEY - Israel in Merneptah’s Inscription and Reliefs
in: Israel Exploration Journal 51 (2001) pp. 57–75
D.B. REDFORD - The Hyksos Invasion in History and Tradition
in: Orientalia 39 (1970) pp. 1-51.
484 E. LIPINSKI Itineraria Phoenicia
in: Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 127 (2004) Peeters p. 502.
485 J.C. GOYON - De l'Afrique à l'Orient (1800-330 avant notre ère)
Paris 2005 Éd. Ellipses pp. 73-75,101-105.
486 Some Israelite clans, like that one of Heber, had negotiated peace agreements with Jabin the king of Hazor (Jg 4:11,17).
487 Y. AHARONI – The Land of the Bible
Philadelphia 1979, Ed. The Westminster Press pp. 220-225.
488 A. ZARZECKI-PELEG, R. BONFIL – Hazor – A Syrian City-State in Mitanni's Orbit?
in: Ugarit-Forschungen 43 (2011) pp. 537-567.
483
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
an alliance). My lord, (I rejected the offer of) tablets of treaty obligations, and (I am still a servant of) the
king of Egypt, (my lord). And now, (may) our lord (come forth to us), and into his power (...) And may
our lord come forth (this) year. Do not be negligent. You will see that they are loyal to service of the king,
my lord. And if my lord is not willing to come forth himself, may my lord send one of his commissioners
together with his troops and chariots (EA 51). This letter shows that Nuḫašše was still a vassal
kingdom of Egypt before its annexation by Šuppiluliuma I (c. -1345), despite it paid tribute
to Mitanni (EA 75) an ally of Egypt from Artatama I’s time (c. -1390). Given that Hazor
appears in Thutmose III’s list of conquered towns it was nominally under Egyptian control
from this period (c. -1450). It is again included in a topographical list of Amenhotep II at
Karnak. Furthermore, Hermitage Papyrus 1116A, dated year 18 of Amenhotep II’s reign (c.
-1400), records the transportation of grain and beer rations to an Egyptian garrison at
Hazor and mentions envoys, termed as mariyannu (“knights”) from various cities (among
them Hazor) in Djahu (Lebanon). Hazor next appears in the topographical list of Seti I
(1299-1283). Despite their scarcity, these documents show that Hazor was under Egyptian
control during the Amarna period. Archaeological excavations of Hazor489 have provided
clarification on the role and power of this city during the Amarna period, for example:
The city of Hazor was the largest city in Canaan during Late Bronze, its size was around
80-100 hectares (below highlighted area) which is almost three times as large as Ugarit, a
small but powerful kingdom. Thus its size was impressive enough to generate some
amount of threat to its surroundings.
Hazor was one of few Late Bronze cities in Canaan that was fortified. The lack of
fortifications in these other cities is suggested to be an Egyptian strategy to weaken their
power. Thus, Egypt might have left the fortifications of Hazor remaining as a means to
defend itself against surrounding city-states in general, and a possible northern threat,
(the Mitannians and later the Hittites) which would have threatened Egypt, in particular.
The prevailing Syrian-influenced architectural elements and objects found in the city
reveal not only a maintained commercial infrastructure and close contacts to the north,
but also that Hazor associated with the northern cultural sphere, although, as in Middle
Bronze, on the periphery.
K. JOSEPHSON HESSE – Hazor – Contacts and trade at Late Bronze Age Hazor
Umeå University 2008, Doctoral thesis, Department of historical, philosophical and religious studies, pp. 9-10,51-57,192-200.
489
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In this context Egypt most likely took advantage of Hazor’s strategic position for
her political purposes. The northernmost vassals, bordering the Mitannian and later Hittite
empire, were Amurru, Kadesh and Damascus, and to the south of them, the northern
border of Hazor’s kingdom was located, whose territory seems to have reached the
southern part of the Beq‘a Valley. Amurru and Damascus acted as military buffers to
Pharaoh’s enemies in the north. However the allegiance to Pharaoh of these remote states,
which were highly interested in extending their own territories, was not reliable. There was
always the possibility of transferring their loyalty to the other side, which also happened
with Kadesh, Amurru and also Damascus490. The disloyal behaviour of ‘Abdi-Ashirta, the
lord of Amurru, led to him being caught by the Egyptians and put to death. Later, his son
Aziru continued these territorial ambitions and eventually joined the Hittites. He was
followed by Niqmaddu II of Ugarit, who also changed sides, while Qatna was destroyed by
the Hittites. During such circumstances it was, of course, an advantage to have a large and
loyal vassal kingdom to trust, or a partner, which could keep an eye on the growing citystates bordering Egypt’s northern enemies, called ‘Apiru (“factious”). In this connection,
the city of Hazor was perfect for Egypt to use as an informant and mediator towards this
potential northern threat. Evidence of the city’s loyalty to Pharaoh in the Amarna period is
shown in its “membership” or “partnership” in a Pharaoh-loyal group, opposed to a
growing coalition against Egypt led by Lab’ayu (“a factious”), the mayor of Shechem.
Hazor appears only in 4 Amarna letters), but none of these letters reveal the name
of the king. It is noteworthy that the king of Alašiya (Cyprus), a member of the Great
Powers club, never uses his name as well (EA 33-40) but merely introduces himself as “the
king of Alašiya” in his letters to Pharaoh. The ruler of Hazor similarly titles himself “the
king of Haṣura”, which is the only Amarna letter addressed to a Pharaoh where a vassal
ruler refers to himself as a king: Message of the king of Hazor. I fall at the feet of my lord. Look, I
have the cities of the king, my lord, under guard until my lord reaches [me]. And when I heard these words
of yours and of the coming forth of the Sun to me, I rejoiced accordingly. I pondered (the news), and my
jubilation came forth. There was peace, and the gods themselves looked (favorably) on me. And I have
indeed prepared everything until the arrival of the king, [my] lord. Look, whenever [Han]i, your messenger,
arrives, the heart rejoices exceedingly. [In] my [heart] my joy [is great]. When... (EA 227). The content
of this letter is quite surprising. The tone of letter EA 227, sent to Pharaoh, is relaxed and
radiates self-confidence compared to other vassal letters, which are filled with various
expressions of self-abasement. This letter hints to a more equal relation between Pharaoh
and the Hazor ruler. In addition, EA 227 mentions a mar šipri “messenger”, Pharaoh’s
personal envoy, who visited Hazor. This mar šipri should be compared to an ambassador or
a political envoy, conveying personal messages or requests or collecting tributes or gifts.
Hazor’s large territory and ambitions to extend this are indicated in EA 227 when the king
of Hazor mentions his cities in plural and in EA 364 when Ayyab, the ruler of Ashtaroth,
writes to the Pharaoh that the ruler of Hazor has taken 3 cities from him. Consequently,
the situation of the king of Hazor is quite unreal: despite all the land of Canaan being
disturbed by many factious who put the country upside down, he feels relaxed and joyful
regarding the peace of the cities in his land. Even stranger, the king of Hazor is accused to
have passed to enemies of Egypt (‘Apiru) by Abi-Milku, the mayor of Tyre: I write to the
king, my lord, because every day the king of Sidon has captured a palace attendant of mine. May the king
give attention to his servant, and may he charge his commissioner to give Usu to his servant for water, for
fetching wood, for straw, for clay. Since he has acted hostilely, has he not violated the oath? There is not
another palace attendant. The one who raids the land of the king is the king of Sidon. The king of Hazor
has abandoned his house and has aligned himself with the ‘Apiru. May the king be concerned about the
490
Damascus (in Upu) which was a vassal of Egypt (EA 53) became a vassal of Hatti (EA 197).
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
palace attendants. These are treacherous fellows. He has taken over the land of the king for the ‘Apiru.
May the king ask his commissioner, who a familiar with Canaan (EA 148). The change in
circumstances between the two letters regarding the king of Hazor is incomprehensible
especially since when the king of Hazor disappears he is replaced by a ruler, not a king,
who complains about all that was done against his city: Message of ‘Abdi-Tirši, the ruler of
Hazor, your servant. I fall at the feet of the king, my lord, 7 times and 7 times (at the feet of the king, my
lord). As I am the loyal servant of the king, my lord, I am indeed guarding Hazor together with its villages
for the king, my lord. May the king, my lord, recall whatever has been done against Hazor, your city, and
against your servant (EA 228). Academics don't try to explain such unlikeliness, in contrast to
the Bible which offers a logical explanation in the Book of Judges.
The Bible reads: But after
Ehud died [in 1366 BCE], the Israelites
again did what was bad in Jehovah’s eyes.
So Jehovah sold them into the hand of
Jabin the king of Canaan, who reigned in
Hazor. The chief of his army was Sisera,
who lived in Harosheth of the nations.
The Israelites cried out to Jehovah,
because Jabin had 900 war chariots with
iron scythes, and he harshly oppressed the
Israelites for 20 years [1366-1346].
Now Deborah, a prophetess, the wife of
Lappidoth, was judging Israel at that
time. She used to sit under Deborah’s
palm tree between Ramah and Bethel in
the mountainous region of Ephraim; the
Israelites would go up to her for judgment.
She sent for Barak the son of Abinoam
out of Kedesh-naphtali and said to him:
Has not Jehovah the God of Israel given
the command? Go and march to Mount
Tabor, and take 10,000 men of
Naphtali and Zebulun with you. I will
bring to you Sisera, the chief of Jabin’s
army, along with his war chariots and his
troops to the stream of Kishon, and I will
give him into your hand (...) They
reported to Sisera that Baʹrak the son of
Abinoam had gone up to Mount Tabor.
At once Sisera assembled all his war
chariots —900 chariots with iron scythes— and all the troops that were with him from Harosheth of the
nations to go to the stream of Kishon. Deborah now said to Barak: Rise up, for this is the day that Jehovah
will give Sisera into your hand. Is Jehovah not going out before you? And Barak descended from Mount
Tabor with 10,000 men following him. Then Jehovah threw Sisera and all his war chariots and all the
army into confusion before the sword of Barak. Finally Sisera got down from his chariot and fled on foot.
Barak chased after the war chariots and the army as far as Harosheth of the nations. So Sisera’s whole
army fell by the sword; not even one remained (Jg 4:1-16). Consequently, it is essential to determine
precisely the role and chronology of the king of Hazor (called Jabin II in the Bible).
153
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
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THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
DATING THE AMARNA PERIOD (1360-1330)
Assyrian, Babylonian and Egyptian chronologies, calibrated by astronomy, are used
to fix the chronologies of Hatti, Ugarit, Mitanni and Amurru491. Israelite chronology is
drawn from the Bible (Amarna period is highlighted in light green):
EGYPT
Amenhotep III
Akhenaten
Semenkhkare
-Ankhkheperure
Tutankhamon
Aÿ
Horemheb
UGARIT
Niqmepa V
Ammištamru II
Niqmaddu III
Arḫalbu
HATTI
Tutḫaliya III
Šuppiluliuma I
Muršili II
Muwatalli II
Urhi-Teshub
Ḫattušili III
reign
1383-1345
1356-1340
1340-1338
1338-1336
1336
-1327
1327-1323
1323-1295
ASSYRIA
Erîba-Adad I
Aššur-uballiṭ I
reign
1380-1360
1360
-1347
1347
-
MITANNI
Šutarna II
Artašumara
Tušratta
-1315
1315-1310
reign
BABYLON
1385-1358 Kadašman-Enlil I
1358
- Burna-Buriaš II
Kurigalzu II
Enlil-nêrârî
Artatama II
Šutarna III
Šattiwaza
reign
AMURRU
1370-1353 Abdi-Aširta
1353
-1322 Aziru
1322
DU-Tešub
-1295 Duppi-Tešub
1295-1275 Bentešina
1275-1268 Šapili
1268-1241 Bentešina
-1323
1323-1313
reign
1375-1360
1360
-1333
1333
-1308
reign
1373-1355
1355-1353
1353
-1339
1339
-1325
1325
-1300
CARKEMISH
(vassal of Hatti)
?
?
?
?
?
Šarri-Kušuh
(Piyaššili)
reign
1325
-1310
reign
1370
-1347
1347
-1314
1314-1312
1312-1280?
1280?-1275
1275-1264
1264-1230
PALESTINE
Ehud/ Shamgar
Jabin II/Sisera
Barak
reign
1386-1366
1366-1346
1346
-
Madian
Gideon (Jerubbaal)
-1306
1306-1299
1299
-1259
Several precisely dated events and based on astronomy allow one to fix an absolute
chronology for the short Amarna period (1360-1330):
Muršili II's reign can be dated precisely492 because at the beginning of his 10th year there
was "a solar omen493" (total eclipse on the Hittite capital Ḫattuša). During this period
1330-1310 BCE there was only one total solar eclipse on Hittite territory, that of 24
June 1312 BCE494. In his annals, the king mentions the death of his father and his older
brother during his accession, all these events were held in a single campaign in 1322
BCE495, between April and November. Šuppiluliuma died in 1322 BCE and his son
Arnuwanda II died during the 6th and final year of the war. Proceedings of Šuppiluliuma
mention a period of 20 years between the Hurrian war of 6 years and the Syrian war of 1
year (KUB 19:9 I). The preparation of the Syrian war covered a period of 3 or 4 years
after the 1st unsuccessful attack against Tušratta at the beginning of his reign (KBo I:1.)
S. IZRE’EL – Singer, A Concise History of Amurru
in: Amurru Akkadian: A Linguistic Study vol. II (Ed. Scholars Press, 1991) pp. 172-179.
492 E. WENTE, C. VAN SICLEN - Studies in Honor of George R. Hughes
in: Studies in Ancient Oriental Civilization 39 (Chicago, 1976) p. 249.
493 I. SINGER – Hittite Prayers
Atlanta 2002 Ed. Society of Biblical Litterature pp. 75,77.
P.J. HUBER -The Solar Omen of Mursili II
in: Journal of the American Oriental Society 121 (2001) pp. 640-644.
494 http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/SEcat5/SE-1399--1300.html http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/SEsearch/SEsearchmap.php?Ecl=-13110624
495 T. BRYCE – The Kingdom of the Hittites
Oxford 2005 Ed. Oxford University Press pp. 154-220.
491
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
Proceedings of Šuppiluliuma (28 III:11-15) tells us that after Akhenaten's death the
craven widow of Semenkhkare ([Nip]Ḫururiya) asked for a son to Hittite king to become
a Pharaoh in Egypt. The chronological reconstruction of this period is as follows: the
total solar eclipse of 14 May 1338 BCE on the city of Akhenaten, cited in allusion on
the Amon's priest graffito dated III Akhet 10, Year 3 of Ankhkheperure496 (1st August
1337 BCE), explains the strange behavior of the queen to get a king on the throne of
Egypt and also the change to sun worship from the time (Amon replacing Aton).
Akhet-Aton (3ht-'itn) means "where the sun-disk rises" represented by the hieroglyph
exactly imitating the sun appearing in the notch of the mountain in Amarna. The temple
in the city was inaugurated on IV Peret 13 in year 5 of Akhenaten and commemorated
in Year 6 on the same date497. The fact that the temple is oriented exactly in line with the
Royal Wadi498 suggests that Akhenaten chose to inaugurate the city, the precise day
when the sun rose in the notch of the mountain, illuminating the temple like a laser
beam. The simulation of sunrise observed at that location499 (14th century BCE) indicates
that it appeared at 4:38 UT in the notch of the mountain (the apparent diameter of
which is 0.9 °, that of the sun is 0.5°) only two days in the year: 3/4 March and 5/6
November, as the apparent path of the sun drift of about 0.4° per day at the horizon (0°
altitude) goes back and forth between the two extreme positions reached at solstices on
1st January and 5 July (spring equinox fell on 2 April500 at that time501). This implies that
the equation: IV Peret 13 = 3 March502 [day of solar illumination in the temple] was
satisfied only for 4 years, from 1341 to 1338 BCE. As the commemoration of IV Peret
13 stopped at the 6th year of Akhenaten (no 7th year), we can assume that it was the last
year of his reign without co-regency (17th year from his co-regency). The accession of
Akhenaten being located on I or II Peret, his 5th year began around January 1341 BCE
and his 6th year to January 1340 BCE503. His father Amenhotep III died on April 1345
BCE during the year 38 of his reign. Letter EA 106 was written 5 years after the
beginning of the war (1352 BCE) and EA 116 after Akhenaten sat on the throne.
Tušratta wrote 7 letters504 to Amenhotep III (EA 17-26) then 3 letters to Amenhotep IV
(EA 27-29). He relates in his first letter (EA 17) his accession to the throne after the
murder of his brother Artašuwara, then the following year an attack of the Hittite king
[Šuppiluliuma] that he managed to repel. EA 23 letter (BM 29793) is dated IV Peret 1
Year 36 and 27 EA letter is dated I Peret [5] Year [1]2 of Amenhotep IV.
Correspondence with Amenhotep III was intense because the EA 20 letter stated that
the following letter would be sent 6 months later, involving a total period of 4 or 5 years
between the first and last letter. Correspondence with Amenhotep IV was more relaxed
since the last letter written to Amenhotep IV (EA 29) states "my messengers for 4
years", involving a period of at least 4 years between the first and the last letter.
Šuppiluliuma I congratulated Semenkhkare (Ḫureya) when he acceded to Egypt's throne
(EA 41), then mentions the murder of Tušratta in a letter to Semenkhkare (EA 43).
W.J. MURNANE – Texts from the Amarna Period
Atlanta 1995 Ed. Society of Biblical Literature pp. 207-208.
497 W.J. MURNANE - The "First Occasion of the Discovery" of Akhet-Aton
in: Studien zur Altägyptischen Kultur 14 (1987) pp. 239-246.
498 D.P. SILVERMAN, J.W. WEGNER, J.H. WEGNER – Akhenaten and Tutankhamun Revolution and Restoration
Philadelphia 2006 Ed. University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology pp. 43-55.
499 R.A. WELLS - The Amarna M,X,K Boundary Stelae Date: A Modern Calendar Equivalent
in: Studien zur Altägyptischen Kultur 14 (1987) pp. 313-333.
500 http://www.imcce.fr/fr/grandpublic/temps/saisons.php
501 This coincidence of 3 March happening today on 18 February [azimuth 102.7 ° at the horizon 0°], the apparent path of the sun
moving towards the summer solstice (on 5 July). The Egyptian calendar was being exactly 365 days it drifted from one day every 4 years
compared to the true solar year of 365.24 days [or a drift of about 0.1° per year].
502 The other possibility IV Peret 13 = 5 November has no solution in the 14 th century BCE.
503 The posthumous stele of year 8 has been completed in the last year of the 4-year cycle, in 1338 BCE.
504 W.L. MORAN - Les lettres d'El Amarna
in: LIPO n°13 Paris 1987 Éd. Cerf pp. 48, 110-190.
496
155
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
156
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
Šuppiluliuma and his son Arnuwanda II died in -1322 (of bubonic plague). The 1st
year of the Hurrian war of 6 years goes back in -1327, the year of Tutankhamun's death.
The Syrian war of 1 year against Amurru is dated -1348 and Šuppiluliuma's attack against
Tušratta in -1352. Tušratta likely had begun to reign 1 year before the attack and died
during the brief reign of Semenkhkare505 (c. -1338). Akhenaten's death in -1340 and EA 9
letter that Burna-Burias II sent to Tutankhamun, shortly after his accession, has coincided
with the beginning of his reign in -1336. Synchronisms are highlighted:
Astronomical dating
first letters
3 March
3 March
14 May
last letters
24 June
1357
1356
1355
1354
1353
1352
1351
1350
1349
1348
1347
1346
1345
1344
1343
1342
1341
1340
1339
1338
1337
1336
1335
1334
1333
1332
1331
1330
1329
1328
1327
1326
1325
1324
1323
1322
1321
1320
1319
1318
1317
1316
1315
1314
1313
1312
EGYPT
MITANNI
Amenhotep III
Šutarna II
27
28
Amenhotep IV
Artašumara
29
2
30
3
Tušratta
31
4
[1]
32 (EA 254)
5
[2]
33
6
EA 17, EA 18
34
7
EA 19, EA 20
35
8
EA 21, EA 22
36 (EA 75)
9
EA 23, EA 24
37 (EA 106)
10
EA 25
38
11
EA 26
Akhenaten
12 (EA 116)
EA 27
2
[13]
3
14
EA 28
4
[15]
5
[16]
EA 29
6
17
[-]
Semenkhkare
[15]
*8*
2
(EA 43)
Ankhkheperure
Tutankhamun
(EA 9)
2
3
4
(Burna-Buriaš II)
5
6
7
8
9
10
Aÿ
2
3
4
Horemheb
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
J. FREU, M. MAZOYER – Les débuts du nouvel empire hittite. Les Hittites et leur histoire
Paris 2007 Éd. L'Harmattan p. 271.
505
HATTI
Tutḫaliya III
1
2
3
4
5
1
2
3
4
24
25
26
27
Šuppiluliuma I
1st attack
2
3
4
‘1 year War’
6/1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9 (EA 41)
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
‘6 years War’
2
3
4
5
Arnuwanda II
Muršili II
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
DATING THE ‘APIRU'S WAR (1347 BCE)
The letter EA 75 allows dating of the ‘Apiru's war, it reads506: [May] the king, my lord,
know that Byblos, the maidserva[nt of the king] from ancient times, is safe and sound. The war, however,
of the ‘Apiru against me is severe (...) The ‘Apiru killed Ad[una, the king] of Arkite, but there was no
one who said anything to ‘Abdi-Aširta, and so they go on taking (territory for themselves) (...) May the
king be informed that the king Hatti has seized all the countries that were vassal of the king of Mittani.
Behold, [he] is king of Naḫrima [and] the land of the Great Kings, [and] ‘Abdi-Aširta, [the servant] and
dog, is tak[ing the land of the king]. Send archers. This war in Canaan, which occurred just before
Amenhotep III's death (EA 116), dated -1345, matches the war dated -1347507 led in Syria
by Šuppiluliuma I. According to the mayor of Byblos: May the king, my lord, know that the war
[again]st us is very severe. As to its being told to you, "Sumur belongs to the king," may the king know
that there was an attack on our garrison, and the sons of ‘Abdi-Aširta seized it. And so there has been no
one to carry word to the king. But give thought to the fact that I am your loyal servant, and whatever I hear
I write to [my] lord. Moreover, give thought to Sumur. It is like a bird in a trap (cage): [The war] is very
severe, and the messengers that [came] from the palace were unable to get [in]to Sumur. It was by night that
I got them in. And here is how Yapaḫ-Hadda [mayor of Beirut] is not just in my regard: when my man
arrived, he bound him. May what is due to me [be gi]ven; it is very much. Now as the king is going to send
the royal commissioners, may the king tell them to decide between us. If the king gives (the property) to his
servant, well and good! Or, on the other hand, let the king take everything for himself. Moreover, all my
towns have been joined to the ‘Apiru, and all of them [are extremely hostile] to me, for [Yapaḫ-Hadda
keeps devising] evil upon evil against me. They have nothing, having paid ransom money, some twice, some
three times. May the king heed the words of his loyal servant and give provisions to his servant and his
maidservant, Byblos. Moreover, it would please me were I with you and so at peace. Look, Aziru and
Yapaḫ-Hadda have made an agreement against me, and I am unable [to d]o anything. Their actions [are
hosti]le to me. Accordingly, my situation is extremely grave. Moreover, note that we have been loyal servants
of the king from ancient times. Moreover, note that I am your loyal servant, but I have nothing but distress.
Note this matter. Note that I am the dirt at your feet, O king! Note: did not your father come out and visit
(his) lands and his mayors? And now the gods and the Sun and the Lady of Byblos have granted that you
be seated on the throne of your father's house (to rule) your land. Who are they, the sons of ‘Abdi-Aširta,
that they have taken the lands of the king for themselves? The king of Mittani? The king of Kaššu
(Babylonia)? The king of Hatti? May the king send archers (and) Yanhamu along with [the prefec]ts from
the land of Yarimuta. The commissioner from Kumidu (EA 116).
Paralleling synchronisms implies dating the war of ‘Apiru just after the “1 year war”
in Syria led by Šuppiluliuma I (c. -1347), 4 years after his first attack (in -1352) against
Mukiš, Nuḫašše and Niya, vassal kingdoms of Mitanni508. The aggression of Šuppiluliuma I
in Syria caused a chain reaction which destabilized all the region, from the north with the
big kingdoms of Mitanni (ally of Egypt) and Amurru (unreliable vassal of Egypt), to the
south with the numerous small kingdoms of Canaan (vassals of Egypt) and Palestine
(independent area). The period of destabilization was intense but short (1447-1445).
(One must know that comparing historical data to archaeological finds has shown
that territory was not constitutive of political power during the Bronze Age and that the
spatial configuration of ancient Near Eastern polities was more related to a sovereign state
rather than a territorial state with boundaries, which is a modern notion509).
W.L. MORAN –The Amarna Letters
London 2002 Ed. The Johns Hopkins University Press pp. 145-146.
507 T.R. BRYCE – Some observations on the Chronology of Šuppiluliuma's Reign
in: Anatolian Studies XXXIX (1989) pp. 19-30.
508 Against Itur-Addu, king Mukiš, Adu-nirari king of Nuḫašše and Agi-Tešub king of Niya (RS 17.340).
509 J. CASANA –Alalakh and the Archaeological Landscape of Mukish: The Political Geography and Population of a LBA Kingdom
in: Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research No. 353 (2009), p. 31.
506
157
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
158
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
year
-1347 1
-1346
-1345
-1344
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
1
2
3
4
5
6
[A] [B] [C] [D] [E] [F] [G]
5
19
[A] Amenhotep III King of Egypt
X
36
XI
XII ***
I
II
III
IV
V
VI
VII 37
VIII
IX
X
XI
XII
I
II
III
IV
V
VI
VII 38
VIII
IX
X
XI
XII
I
II
III
IV
V
1
VI
VII
VIII
IX
X
XI
XII
2
I
II
III
***
10
13
11
20
6
0
***
Letter EA 23 (year 36 of Amenhotep III)
[F, G] Jabin II King of Hazor. Letter EA 75 (war in
Syria led by King of Hatti, war of ‘Apiru being in progress)
[B] Amenhotep IV King of Egypt
[C] Aššur-uballit I King of Assyria
[D] Šuppiluliuma I King of Hatti
[E] Tušratta King of Mitanni
[F] Baraq Judge of Israel
[G] Abdi-Tirši Mayor of Hazor
11
12
7
13
8
14
1
15
2
12
***
***
[A] Akhenaten, [B] Amenhotep IV King of Egypt
Letter EA 26 Amenhotep III is dead
***
***
Letter EA 27 dated December year [1]2 of Amenhotep IV
***
Reception of foreign tributes dated February year 12
[13]
16
14
3
9
The first purpose of wars was to annex a country for further payments of tribute.
Rulers who refused to comply were ransomed in order to get a booty and sometimes killed.
The great kingdoms of that time received tributes paid by their vassals (once a year) and
gave them in exchange a police protection. Two letters from Burna-Buriaš II to
Tutankhamun (Nibḫureriya) show that the protection of the king of Egypt was defective in
Canaan and consequently Canaanite mayors sought to change to ally with other kings: Now,
my merchants who were on their way with Aḫu-rabu, were detained in Canaan for business matters. After
Aḫu-tabu went on to my brother, in Ḫinnatuna of Canaan [Jos 19:14], Šum-Adda, the son of Balumme,
and Šutatna, the son of Šaratum of Akka, having sent their men, killed my merchants and rook away
their money. I send [...] to you posthaste. Inquire [from him so] he can inform you. Canaan is your country,
and [its] kings [are your servants]. In your country I have been despoiled. Bring [them] to account and
make compensation for the money that they took away. Put to death the men who put my servants [to]
death, and so avenge their blood. And if you do not put these men to death, they are going to kill again, be
it a caravan of mine or your own messengers, and so messengers between us will thereby be cut off. And if
they try to deny this to you, Šum-Adda, having blocked the passage of one man of mine, retained him in his
company, and another man, having been forced into service by Šutatna of Akka, is still serving him. These
men should be brought to you so you can investigate, inquire [whether they are] dead, and thus become
informed (EA 8). In the time of Kurigalzu [1391-1375], my ancestor, all the Canaanites, wrote here to
him, saying: Come to the border of the country so we can revolt and be allied with you. My ancestor sent
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
them this (reply), saying: Forget about being allied with me. If you become enemies of the king of Egypt, and
are allied with anyone else, will I not then come and plunder you? How can there be an alliance with me?
For the sake of your ancestor my ancestor did not listen to them. Now, as for my Assyrian vassals, I was
not the one who sent them to you. Why on their own authority have they come to your country? If you love
me, they will conduct no business whatsoever. Send them off to me empty-handed (EA 9).
Historical context explains the strategic role of Syria which was a hub in
international trade at that time. Since Amenhotep II (1420-1392) the Egyptians were going
to control the great trade route to Mesopotamia through alliances with the Mitanni510.
Dynastic marriages between Thutmose IV (1392-1383) and Artatama I (1390-1373) would
seal definitely the alliance between Egypt and Mitanni (EA 29:16). Thus the entire
Mediterranean coast (from Philistia to Phoenicia) was controlled by Egyptians, as far as
Byblos and the north west of Syria (kingdom of Carchemish) was under the control of the
Hittites. This balance would be broken after the attack north of Hatti by Kaska (EA 31:2627). Tudhaliya III (1370-1353) embarked on the monumental task of winning back his
kingdom from the enemy forces which had occupied his land which laid the foundations in
the campaigns of reconquest511. When Tudhaliya III died his son Šuppiluliuma continued
this reconquest eastward annexing the Syrian part of Mitanni512: Nuḫasse (EA 51) and
Qatna (EA 55). Tušratta managed to stop the attacks (EA 17:30-35) and Ammištamru II
(1360-1347), the king of Ugarit, wrote to Amenhotep III (1383-1345) because he feared
being annexed by Šuppiluliuma I (EA 45). This first attack, the "Syrian War of 1 Year" in
1352 BCE, was the starting point of the voluminous correspondence found in El-Amarna.
The correspondence of the southern vassals has certain clear sequences and
correlations. One point of reference is the figure of Lab’ayu, mayor of Shechem (EA 252254), who clearly belongs to the earliest level of this correspondence513. As the hieratic
dockect on EA 254 is dated year 3[2 Amenhotep III], this letter written in 1352/1351
matches exactly at the time of the war in Syria: I [Lab’ayu] have obeyed the orders that the king
wrote to me. Who am I that the king should lose his land on account of me? The fact is that I am a loyal
servant of the king! I am not a rebel and I am not delinquent in duty. I have not held back my payments of
tribute; I have not held back anything requested by my commissioner. He denounces me unjustly, but the
king, my lord, does not examine my (alleged) act of rebellion. Moreover, my act of rebellion is this: when I
entered Gezer, I kept on saying: Everything of mine the king takes, but where is what belongs to Milkilu?
I know the actions of Milkilu against me! Moreover, the king wrote for my son. I did not know that my
son was consorting with the ‘Apiru. I herewith hand him over to Addaya [the commissioner]. Moreover,
how, if the king wrote for my wife, how could I hold her back? How, if the king wrote to me: Put a bronze
dagger into your heart and die, how could I not execute the order of the king? (EA 254). Obviously
Lab’ayu profited from the intervention by Šuppiluliuma to loot some Canaanite cities in his
area and encourage them to secede. This local insurgency should be considered minor
because at that time the Egyptians divided their partners in order of importance514, 1st row
(temple of Soleb): Ugarit, Kadesh, Cyprus, Hatti and Naharina (Mitanni); ranked second:
Tyre, Sidon, Byblos, Carchemish and Assyria. So, the mayors of Canaan, vassals of Egypt,
came in 3rd which explains the non-intervention of Egyptians. However the consequences
of the Syrian War of 1 year in 1348/1347 were much more serious. ‘Abdi-Aširta, the king
J. FREU – Histoire du Mitanni
Paris 2003 Éd. L'Harmattan pp. 72-90.
511 T. BRYCE – The Kingdom of the Hittites
Oxford 2005 Ed. Oxford University Press pp. 144-153.
512 J. FREU – Histoire politique du royaume d'Ugarit
Paris 2006 Éd. L'Harmattan pp. 36-49.
513 W.L. MORAN – The Amarna Letters
London 1992 nEd. The Johns Hopkins University Press pp. XXXIV-XXXIX.
514 J. ELAYI – Histoire de la Phénicie
Paris 2013 Éd. Perrin pp. 76-92.
510
159
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
160
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
of Amurru, who did not receive any support from Amenhotep III, preferred to cooperate
with Šuppiluliuma and paid him by ransoming the Canaanite kings of his area. As did
Lab‘ayu earlier, the war of Šuppiluliuma encouraged him to loot some Canaanite cities in
his area and encourage them to secede. In a very pragmatic way, Amenhotep III refused to
engage in an uncertain and costly war against the Hittite empire and merely managed some
police operations against ‘Abdi-Aširta and Lab’ayu and finally had them executed (c. -1346).
Despite this Egyptian retaliation, Aziru, the son of ‘Abdi-Aširta, continued the policy of his
father who was forced to pact with the Hittites. When Akhenaten succeeded Amenhotep
III, he was mainly concerned with his new capital Akhetaten, which may explain why the
police operations in Syria ceased.
In sum the term ‘Apiru refers only to factious like some Amorites in the north and
Canaanites in the south but never to the Hebrews in Palestine, an area which seems to have
played no role in all the conflicts. However, the term Ḫapiru is also used to designate the
inhabitants of Palestine (Hebrews/ Canaanites), a country that was at peace, by ‘Abdi-Ḫeba,
the mayor of Jerusalem, who explained that he lived among them. In fact the area not
mentioned in the Amarna letters corresponds to the Israelites settlement (Jos 12:1-24):
Land or kingdom
Hatti
Mitanni
Ugarit area
Siyannu (Lebanon)
Nuḫ ašše (Syria)
Amurru (Lebanon)
Upu (Syria)
Canaan (Syria)
(Phoenicia)
Hazor area
Palestine (Israel)
Philistia
Egypt
SIYANNU
Abdi-Ḫebat
Abdi-Anati
Capital or city
Ruler (king or mayor)
Major change
Title
1355 BCE
1345 BCE
1335 BCE
Hattuša
Šuppiluliuma I
King
Waššukkani
Tušratta
King
Ugarit
Ammištamru II
Niqmaddu III
King
Uštanu
Sisera (Sisaruwa)
Integrated with Siyannu
King?
Siyannu
‘Abdi-Ḫebat
Abdi-Anati
King
?
Addu-nirari King
Annexed by the Hittites
near Kadesh ?
‘Abdi-Aširta
Aziru (Hittite vassal)
King
Damascus
?
King
Qatna
Akizzi
Destroyed by the Hittites
Mayor
Kadesh (Qidšu)
Aitukama
Mayor
Arkite (Irqata)
Aduna
?
Mayor
Lapana (near Hamath)
Tiwati
Mayor
Byblos (Gubla)
Rib-Hadda
Mayor
Ili-Rapiḫ
Beirut (Biruta)
Ammunira
Mayor
Yapaḫ-Hadda
Kumidu (Kamid el-Loz) Biryawaza
Mayor
Zimredda
Mayor
Sidon (Ṣiduna)
Abi-Milku
Mayor
Tyre (Ṣurru)
Hazor (Haṣura)
[Jabin II] King
Abdi-Tirši (no longer king) Mayor
Akko (Akka)
Satatna
Mayor
Ashtaroth (Aštartu)
Ayyab Biridašwa
Mayor
Hannaton (Ḫinnatuna)
[?]
Mayor?
Megiddo (Magidda)
Biridiya
Mayor
Mayor
Pella (Piḫilu)
Mut-Baḫli
Shechem (Sakmu)
Lab’ayu
Lab’ayu's sons
Mayor
Gezer (Gazru)
Adda-danu/ Milkilu
Mayor
Yapaḫu
Jerusalem (Urusalim)
‘Abdi-Ḫeba
Mayor
Keilah (Qiltu)
Šuwardata
‘Abdi-Aštarti
Mayor
Lachish (Lakiša)
Šipti-Ba‘la/ Zimredda Yabni-ilu
Mayor
Ashkelon (Ašqaluna)
Yidya
Ruler
Gaza (Ḫazzatu)
Mayor?
Yaḫtiru
Thebes/El-Amarna
Amenhotep III
Akhenaten
King
USNATU
Sisera
reign
1370-1345
1345-1325
HAZOR
[Jabin II]
Abdi-Tirši
1370-1345
1345-1325
PALESTINE
Jabin II/Sisera
Barak
reign
1366-1346
1346-1306
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
The marauding Habiru of Late Bronze Canaan, generally designating seditious/
factious at this time, have often been described in both social and linguistic terms as the
precursors to the earliest Hebrews, but the pastoral-nomadic Shasu, another social group
from the east, provides a more fitting background for Israel's origins515. Egyptians knew
well the area of Syria-Palestine which they called Retenu until Thutmose III (1469-1418),
then from Amenhotep II516 (1420-1392): Upper Retenu (Palestine) and Lower Retenu517
(Syria). From Thutmose II (1472-1469) appears the new term “Land of Shasu (Israel and
Judah)” instead of “Upper Retenu” which would be later exclusively used in the numerous
topographical lists written under Amenhotep III518 (1383-1345). A list of toponyms
enumerates: Pella-foreign land (p-ḥ-r ḫ3st), Shasu-foreign land (š3-sw-w ḫ3st), Qatna (qd-d-ÿ-n3), Gezer (q-3-d-3-r), however, Shasu's name refers to both the country and the people of
Palestine. For example a list of four toponyms reads: Land of Shasu after Maat (t3 š3-sw-w
s3 m-’-ti-i); Land of Shasu those of Yehua (t3 š3-sw-w y-h-w3 w); Land of Shasu showing
respect to Bel (t3 š3-sw t-w-r-ÿ b-l); Bait house of Anat (b-3-i-ti h ‘-[n-t]). It is noteworthy that
in his treaty519 with Duppi-Tešub (1312-1280), King of Amurru, are mentioned “the Hapiri
gods” by Muršili II (1322-1295), King of Hatti.
If Palestine played no role in the events at that time, the kingdom of Hazor was a
notable exception. The venerable kingdom of Canaan was stuck between Mitanni to the
northeast, Amurru to the northwest and Palestine to the south. The king of Hazor's death
coincided with the appointment of Barak (in -1346), an Israelite judge from Kedesh (Tell
Qades) who fought Jabin II who was killed at that time (Jg 4:1-24). Although Jabin is
presented as king of Canaan, in practice, Sisera was controlling the north of Palestine
(Israel). It is noteworthy that the south of Palestine (Judah) was at peace, consequently, this
part of Canaan was a “no man’s land” for Egyptians’ chancery. The title “king of Canaan”
was honorary520, it was already used at the time of the conquest of Joshua as is specified
about Jabin I (1510-1490?): Jabin king of Hazor heard about this (...) Joshua then turned back and
captured Hazor, putting its king to the sword. Hazor in olden days was the capital of all these kingdoms
(Jos 11:1,10). Jabin II's death early in the conflict explains his absence among Amarna
letters (except letter EA 227). This king was able to control the north of Palestine not
because of a numerical superiority but thanks to the “900 war chariots of iron” (Jg 4:3; 5:8)
belonging to Sisera, his general of army: They [the Israelites] chose new gods; then the cities of the
rulers [mayors] fought; a shield could not be seen, nor lance, among 40,000 in Israel (Jg 5:8 LXX).
Thus, after the disappearance of Sisera, as well as his army, the kingdom of Hazor no
longer played a major role in Canaan. In addition, Barak’s choice to attack the powerful
kingdom of Hazor and its commander-in-chief (Sisera) at the very moment when the
Hittite empire triggered its attack against the Syrian kingdoms proved to be providential.
Indeed, the military disorganization throughout the whole region of Canaan (under
Egyptian control) allowed the Hebrews to prevail easily over their mighty oppressors. At
that time a garrison of 400 men and pairs of horses was enough to control a whole territory
(EA 76). Furthermore, there were only 3000 Egyptian soldiers in Canaan (EA 11), spread
over 3 towns (Sumur, Kumidu, Gaza), to control the whole land and in case of war a
garrison of 30-50 chariots was quite sufficient to protect a big city (EA 107, 127, 366).
A. RAINEY – Shasu or Habiru : Who Were the Earky Israelites ?
in: Biblical Archaeological Society n°34 (2008) pp. 51-55.
516 J. SIMONS – Handbook for the Study of Egyptian Topographical Lists Relating to Western Asia
Leiden 1937 Ed. E.J. Brill pp. 123-124, 130, 210.
517 Upper Retenu (r-t-nw ḥ-r-t); Lower Retenu (r-t-nw h-r-t).
518 R. GIVEON - Les bédouins Shosou des documents égyptiens
Leiden 1971 Ed. E.J. Brill pp. 9-10, 17-33.
519 J.B. PRITCHARD - Ancient Near Eastern Texts
Princeton 1969 Ed. Princeton University Press pp. 203-206.
520 Using a former title "king" in a honorific way is a current Eastern practice.
515
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THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
If the letters from Canaanite mayors are silent on the situation in Palestine (Israel in
the north, Judah in the south) the Egyptian texts and their topographical lists confirm the
existence of a vast area inhabited by the Shasu called Shasu-land (Israel & Judah). The cities
conquered by Joshua appearing in the Amarna letters are those which remained occupied
by the Canaanites, but the cities which became entirely Israelites like: Hebron (el-Khalil),
Mamre (Ramat el-Khalil), Arad (Tell Arad), Aroer (Khirbet Arair), Beer-sheba (Tell Sheba),
Dan (Tell el-Qadi), Debir (Khirbet er-Rabud), Adullam (Khirbet esh-Sheikh Madhkur),
Libnah (Tell Burna), Shiloh (Khirbet Seilum), Tirzah (Tell el-Farah), Eshtemoa (es-Semu‘a),
Jattir (Khirbet el-Attir), Juttah (Yatta), etc., are never mentioned in Amarna letters despite
their existence being confirmed by archaeology521. Who could have been the inhabitants of
those cities522 (below), wearing tassels at the 4 corners of their garments (Shasu depicted in
Amarna tombs), who were not under Egyptian control, apart from the Israelites? It is
funny that for once an absence of historical evidence in Egyptian documents (supreme
evidence for archaeologists) is contradicted by archaeological evidence.
A. NEGEV, S. GIBSON – Dictionnaire archéologique de la Bible
Paris 2006 Ed. The Jerusalem Publishing House Ltd. pp. 30-31, 242-245, 282-285.
522 H.G. MAY – Oxford Bible Atlas
New York 1984, Ed. Oxford University Press, pp. 60-63.
521
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
In the Bible, the role of Sisera as prince of the army of Jabin II is paramount (Ps
83:9) as he is the only one to be cited (1Sa 12:9). The Hebrew word sar “prince/leader” is
used instead of rosh “head/chief” (1Sa 15:17). This character must have been important
because he was mentioned in a treaty of alliance (RS 19.68) between two kings of the
region523: As from today, Niqmaddu, king of Ugarit, and Aziru, king of the Amurru, did between them
(an agreement) by oath (...) If bunchs of Hapiru make raids in my country Aziru will fight against my
enemy with chariots and soldiers. If there are troubles in my country Aziru will come to my rescue <with>
his chariots and his troops. On the other hand, Sisaruwa (si-sa-ru-wa) is a subject of the king and the city
of Uštanu is his residence524. If Sisaruwa behaves as an enemy to the king, Aziru will fight against
Sisaruwa with his chariots and his troops. The Sisera (Sisara in the LXX) of this treaty between
two important kings is the same as the one from the Bible for the following reasons:
Both have the same name (Si-sa-ru-wa in Babylonian, meaning unclear525), which is
extremely rare and unique in the whole Bible and also in the whole onomastic corpus526.
Both have exactly the same title: Prince and army general.
Both died in the same year: 1347 BCE. After Sisera's death his principality (Uštanu)527
was annexed to Siyannu528.
Both lived in the same place. Haroshet-ha-Goiim was the residence of Sisera (Jg 4:13), if
this locality remains unknown up till now, this name means “Wooded place (1Sa 23:15)
of nations”; “Wooded place in Lebanon (Ezk 31:3)”; “Forest of Lebanon (1Ki 7:2)”.
The city of Uštanu was the residence of Sisera and was indeed situated south of Siyannu
in Lebanon between Ugarit and Amurru.
According to the Bible, Sisera died just before the end of the rulership of Jabin II
over Israel, whereas this treaty must be concluded to this date, and therefore early in the
reigns of Niqmaddu III (1347-1315) and Aziru (1347-1314), likely between the “1 year
War” of Šuppiluliuma I in 1348 BCE and the “War of Apiru” in 1347 BCE. The treaty
shows that Aziru, king of Amurru, was now an ally of the king of Ugarit, a vassal kingdom
of the Hittites, this was not the case before529 when he was an ally of Egypt. However,
despite the fact that Sisera was a subject of the king of Ugarit he was considered as a
potential enemy by the two Hittite vassal kings. Canaanite mayors could hire a garrison of
Syrian mercenaries in their service530 (of a hundred men) either to protect their city or to
make war to another mayor but the use of troops and chariots was reserved for the
(Egyptian or Hittite) army exclusively. It is noteworthy that the set of “900 chariots” (Jg
4:13) was a huge quantity because the whole Egyptian army in Canaan was made up of
3000 soldiers at that time (EA 11) and if an Egyptian garrison constituted on average 100
infantrymen, 100 soldiers (archers) and 30 chariots (EA 127), with its charioteers, that
means that the army of Sisera was comparable to the Egyptian army in Canaan, but not to
the Hittite army of commander-in-chief Zitana constituted of 90,000 infantrymen (EA
170). Maintaining such a large army, especially the pay of soldiers, required possessing huge
resources531, but given that Ušnatu was just a city-state, not a kingdom with many cities, the
S. LACKENBACHER – Textes akkadiens d'Ugarit
in: LIPO n° 20 (2002) Éd. Cerf pp. 64-65, 180-181.
524 According to the context “residence” means “principality”.
525 Sîsrâ (Ezra 2:53) means perhaps "a field of battle" in Syriac (sirsarthâ) or "fading flower of wind" (Is 28:4) in Hebrew (ṣiṣâ rûaḥ).
526 R. DE VAUX – Histoire ancienne d'Israël. La période des juges
Paris 1987 Éd. Gabalda pp. 102-103.
527 G. BECKMAN – Hittite Diplomatic Texts
Atlanta 1999 Ed. Society of Biblical Literature pp. 175-176.
528 F. MALBRANT-LABAT –Siyannu, Uštanu et Ugarit
in: De la Tablilla a la Inteligencia Artificial (Instituto de Estudios Islamicos y del Oriente Proximo, 2003) pp. 67-75.
529 J.-M. MICHAUD – La Bible et l'héritage d'Ougarit
Sherbrooke 2005 Éd. C.G.C. pp. 79-84.
530 At that time a soldier was worth about 50 shekels of silver (EA 114), or around one pound of siver.
531 For example, the king of Ugarit [Ammištamru III] had preferred paying 50 gold minas (3000 shekels or 34 kg) to Tutḫaliya IV (12411209), the king of Hatti, in order to be exempted of sending his army against Assyria (RS 17.59).
523
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THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
only way to acquire a large amount of money was either to do looting of wealthy cities or
act as mercenaries for sake of kings. Looting is excluded for two reasons: 1) Sisera is never
mentioned in Syria and 2) if he had intervened in this region the powerful Hittite king
would quickly neutralized him. The second option “act as mercenaries for sake of kings” is
restricted because that couldn't be either the king of Amurru, a vassal of Hittite king
through the king of Ugarit and or the king of Egypt who did not need such a partner, in
addition, he is never mention in the Egyptian correspondence. The only possible
candidates in Canaan who were able to afford and hire this powerful army general are
either the king of Hatti or the king of Hazor, the only king mentioned in Canaan at that
time (in addition archaeology shows that he was wealthy).
We know that at the time of Artatama I (1390-1373) the Mitannian power had
increased tax burden on its vassals532 in Syria, then Tutḫaliya III (1370-1353), the king of
Hatti, made incursions in Syria for the purpose of plundering533. Sometimes, Hittite kings
have hired armies for their incursions in Syria534, for example Šuppiluliuma I (1353-1322)
wrote in a letter (RS 17.340): The Great King, sent princes and great ones with soldiers and chariots in
Ugarit and they raided the enemy troops of Ugarit. Šumi[tti] an Amorrite general wrote to the king
of Ugarit the following letter: Say to the king [Šuppiluliuma I], my lord: Šumi[tti] thus (says) your
servant (...) It's been 5 months since I am installed in Amurru country and that I monitor day and night. I
monitor them this way: I monitor their roads and their access roads. Half of my chariots are located at the
edge of the [Mediterranean] Sea and the other half on the edge of the Lebanon Mountains (...) That the
king gives orders to the troops and chariots which have to come in (...) it is feared that the king of Egypt
arrives quickly and (in that case) we could not get the upper hand. It is feared that the king of Egypt comes
out (of his country), but if he did not come out and that was the troop of his archers [garrisons in Canaan]
which was coming out, I would able to have the upper hand. Let the king therefore assigned troops and
chariots, we can battle and get the upper hand. In these circumstances, we can understand why
Sisera, a powerful Amorite ruler, chose to rent his army to the king of Hazor, a vassal
kingdom of Egypt (the main power in the area), rather than to Ugarit, a vassal kingdom of
Hatti. The king of Hazor probably had wanted to increase his resources by partnering with
Sisera in order to loot Palestine, a defenceless country.
All the previous coincidences confirm the biblical story in a striking way:
He who succeeded King of Hazor, Abdi-Tirši (1345-1325), had no longer the title of
king because he had lost his power and his complaints of what had been done against
his city are understandable.
The principality headed by Sisera (Ušnatu) was attached to the kingdom of Siyannu,
which was led by Abdi-Anati (1345-1325), after he died (in 1347 BCE).
The land controlled by the king of Hazor (Israel) was “given” to the Hapiru (Hebrews)
after the king of Hazor lost his army. According to the text of Judges 4:24-25, Jabin II
initially at peace with the Hebrews was defeated gradually.
Note that Catholic exegetes prefer to situate the episode of Jabin and Sisera around
1150 BCE because they place the Exodus during the reign of Ramses II535. This absurd
hypothesis proves that without a reliable and accurate chronology it is impossible to
establish a reliable and accurate history. The examination of Egyptian documents over the
period 1300-1200 shows that the country of Israel already existed before Ramses II.
J. FREU – Histoire du Mitanni
Paris 2003 Éd. L'Harmattan pp. 83-84.
533 T. BRYCE – The Kingdom of the Hittites
Oxford 2005 Ed. Oxford University Press pp. 145-153.
534 S. LACKENBACHER – Textes akkadiens d'Ugarit
in: Littératures Anciennes du Proche-Orient 20 (Cerf , 2002), pp. 33-36,64-74.
535 R. DE VAUX – Histoire ancienne d’Israël
Paris 1987 Éd. J. Gabalda, pp. 100-105.
532
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
DATING THE BETH-SHEAN VICTORY OF SETI I (1294 BCE)
In the years following the Amarna period536, the expansionist policies of Hatti and
Assyria had led to the virtual eclipse of Mitanian independence. Of greater concern to
Egypt, however, was the situation of Kadesh, the great trading centre of the Orontes Valley
whose chiefs felt increasing pressure to ally with Hatti. In spite of peace treaties between
the two nations, Hittite and Egyptian armies had clashed near Kadesh at some point during
or after the reign of Tutankhamun (1336-1327). A new dynasty, the 19th, had a military
background, and felt it was time to reassert the role of the king as war-leader. Initially Seti I
(1294-1283) took the field against the Shasu, briefly returned Amurru (in 1294 BCE) to
Egyptian control, and then engaged a Hittite army near Kadesh. However, Seti's successes
(portrayed with emphasis on the wall of Karnak) were only preliminary skirmishes in which
the two armies appraised the gathering storm: it was his son, Ramses II (1283-1216), who
was destined to meet the armies of Muwatalli II of Hatti (1295-1275) in the climactic battle
of Kadesh (in 1278 BCE) for control of the Orontes.
A careful reconstruction of
the itinerary of Seti shows that the
Tehenu (Libyans) and the defeated
Shasu were around Gaza537 (land of
the Philistines) and the fights
against the Hittites in the Retenu,
including military operations against
the city of Kadesh and Amurru,
took place in the north of Palestine.
Upon his return, the troubles
among local leaders that Seti
punished took place around BethShean538, a Canaanite area also
inhabited by the Hebrews. On the
stela of Seti describing his victories
in Palestine, technical words used
remain in line with his predecessors
since ethnic groups are designated
according to their geographical
location since Apiru are mainly some Amorites factious, Asiatics (aamu) are the inhabitants
of Canaan and Shasu are the Bedouins in Palestine: Year 1, 3rd month of the 3rd season, day 10
(... Seti) valiant leader of his army, valiant warrior in the very heart of the fray, a Bastet (lioness goddess of
war) terrible in combat, penetrating into a mass of Asiatics and making them prostrate, crushing the
princes of Retenu, reaching the (very) ends of him who transgresses against his way. He causes to retreat the
princes of Kharu (Syria), all the boastfulness of whose mouth was (so) great. Every foreign country of the
ends of the earth, their princes say: Where shall we go? They spend the night giving testimony in his name,
saying: Behold it, behold it? in their hearts. It is the strength of his father Amon that decreed to him valor
and victory. On this day one came to speak to his majesty, as follows: The wretched foe who is in the town of
Hamath is gathering to himself many people, while he is seizing the town of Beth-Shean. Then there will be
an alliance with them of Pehal (Pella). He does not permit the Prince of Rehob to go outside. Thereupon his
B. MANLEY – Historical Atlas of Ancient Egypte
London 1996 Ed. Penguin Books pp. 92-93.
537 A. DEGRÈVE – La campagne asiatique de l'an 1 de Séthy Ier
in: Revue d'égyptologie 57 (2006) pp. 47-64.
538 C. VANDERSLEYEN - L'Egypte et la vallée du Nil Tome 2
Paris 1995 Éd. Presses Universitaires de France pp. 498-504.
536
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majesty sent the first army of Amon, (named) "Mighty of Bows," to the town of Hamath, the first army of
the Re, (named) "Plentiful of Valour," to the town of Beth-Shean, and the first army of Seth, (named)
"Strong of Bows," to the town of Yenoam. Campaign in Djahi: Year 1 of the Renaissance (...) Then one
came to say to his majesty: The foe belonging to the Shasu are plotting rebellion. Their tribal chiefs are
gathered in one place, waiting on the mountain ranges of Kharu (...) His majesty kills them all at one time,
and leaves no heirs among them. He who is spared by his hand is a living prisoner, carried off to Egypt (...)
The desolation which the mighty arm of Pharaoh -life, prosperity, health!- made among the foe belonging to
the Shasu from the fortress of Sile (Tjaru) to the Canaan. His majesty prevailed over them like a fierce
lion. They were made into corpses throughout their valleys, stretched out in their (own) blood, like that
which has never been (...) Lebanon. Cutting down [cedar for] the great barque upon the river,"Amon-Userhet," as well as for the great flagpoles of Amon (...) The return of his majesty from Upper Retenu, having
extended the frontiers of Egypt. The plunder which his majesty carried off from these Shasu, whom his
majesty himself captured in the year 1 of the Renaissance. Campaign in Upper Retenu: The going up
which Pharaoh -life, prosperity, health !- made to desolate the land of Kadesh and the land of Amurru (...)
Presentation of tribute by the good god to his father Amon-Re, Lord of the Thrones of the Two Lands, at
his return from the country of Hatti, having annihilated the rebellious countries and crushed the Asiatics in
their places... The great princes of the wretched Retenu, whom his majesty carried off by his victories from the
country of Hatti, to fill the workhouse of his father Amon-Re (...) On this day (...): The Apiru of Mount
Yarmuta, with Teyer..., have arisen in attack upon the Asiatics of Rehem. Then his majesty said: How
can these wretched Asiatics think of taking their arms for further disorder?... Then his majesty commanded
a certain number of people from his infantry and his numerous chariotry that their faces turn back to the
foreign country Djahi539. These stories about "Seti's great victories" are more the describing of
a police operation to quell a rebellion in northern Palestine than a war between two
countries540. However, the fact that the Hittite empire did not react against the annexation
of Amurru, its vassal kingdom, is hard to explain because on his death, Muršili II (13221295) left to his son and successor Muwatalli II (1295-1275) a relatively stable kingdom, in
addition it was fortunate for Seti that the Hittites did not retaliate promptly541.
The treaty between Tudhaliya IV and Šaušgamuwa542 confirms Seti's victory, which
"was due to a betrayal of the men of Amurru(!)": [Earlier] the land of Amurru had not been
defeated by the force of arms of Hatti. When [Aziru came] to the (great-)grandfather of My Majesty in
Hatti, the lands of Amurru were still [hostile]. They [were] subjects of the King of Hurri (Mitanni).
Aziru accordingly gave him (Šuppiluliuma) his allegiance, although he did [not] defeat him by force of
arms. And Aziru, your (great-great-)grandiather, protected Šuppiluliuma as overlord, and he protected
Hatti. Later he also protected Muršili as overlord, and he protected Hatti. In no way did he commit an
offense against Hatti. But when Muwatalli, uncle of My Majesty, became King, the men of Amurru
committed an offense against him, informing him as follows: We were voluntary subjects. Now we are no
longer your subjects. And they went over to the King of Egypt. Then My Majesty's uncle Muwatalli and the
King of Egypt fought over the men of Amurru. Muwatalli defeated him, destroyed the land of Amurru by
force of arms, and subjugated it. And he made Šapili king in the land of Amurru. But when Muwatalli,
the uncle of My Majesty, died, the father of My Majesty, Hattušili, became King. He deposed Šapili and
made Bentešina, your father, king in the land of Amurru. He protected the father of My Majesty, and he
protected Hatti. In no way did he commit an offense against Hatti. Thus, in 1295/1294543 the men of
Amurru voluntarily abandoned the Hatti for going over to the King of Egypt!
J.B. PRITCHARD - Ancient Near Eastern Texts
Princeton 1969 Ed. Princeton University Press pp. 253-255.
540 W.J. MURNANE – The Road to Kadesh in: Studies in Ancient Oriental Civilization n°42 (1990) pp. 39-50.
541 T. BRYCE – The Kingdom of the Hittites
Oxford 2005 Ed. Oxford University Press pp. 221, 228-229.
542 G. BECKMAN – Hittite Diplomatic Texts
Atlanta 1999 Ed. Society of Biblical Literature pp. 103-105.
543 Muwatalli's accession in 1295/1294 coincide with year 1 of Seti I in 1294 BCE.
539
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
Without the biblical account which places these events at the beginning of the
judicature of Gideon (1299-1259), this change of alliance remains inexplicable544. The
situation in Palestine at this time is pictured as anarchic, disorders being caused by the
Midianites, the Amalekites (Libyans) near Gaza and Orientals near Beth-Shean (Jg 6:1-6,33)
in the plain of Jezreel (Jos 17:16). The term "Oriental" meant mostly Syrians (Gn 25:6,20).
Those of this period are named Sidonians, up to the entrance of Hamath (Jg 3:3), an area
controlled by the Kingdom of Amurru. Gideon, whose name means "one who cuts off",
put an end to this disorder when he slaughtered 135,000 Orientals near Beth-Shean (Jg
8:10). The victory of Gideon had to have been memorable because Eusebius reports the
writings of Porphyry of Tyre (234-305), who was a Neoplatonic philosopher born in Tyre,
and above all an opponent of Christianity who challenged the biblical text: the historian of this
subject is Sanchuniathon, an author of great antiquity, and older, as they say, than the Trojan times [c.
1200 BCE], one whom they testify to have been approved for the accuracy and truth of his Phoenician
History. Philo of Byblos, not the Hebrew, translated his whole work from the Phoenician language into the
Greek, and published it545. The author in our own day of the compilation against us mentions these things
in the 4th book of his treatise Against the Christians, where he bears the following testimony to
Sanchuniathon, word for word: Of the affairs of the Jews the truest history, because the most in accordance
with their places and names, is that of Sanchuniathon of Beirut, who received the records from Hierombalus
(Jerubbaal) the priest of the god Ieüô (Yehua); he dedicated his history to Abibaal king of Beirut, and was
approved by him and by the investigators of truth in his time. Now the times of these men fall even before
the date of the Trojan war, and approach nearly to the times of Moses, as is shown by the successions of the
kings of Phoenicia. And Sanchuniathon, who made a complete collection of ancient history from the records
in the various cities and from the registers in the temples, and wrote in the Phoenician language
(Praeparatio Evangelica I:9:20-22). Several parts of Porphyry's narrative are correct: 1) the
kings of Beirut546 were privileged witnesses of the attack against the kingdom of Amurru; 2)
the official of Yehua who won a great victory near Beth-Shean in 1299 BCE (he became
afterwards the ruler of the people) was actually called Jerubbaal (Jg 6:32; 7:1) or Hierombal
in Greek. Thus this crushing defeat could explain the shifting alliances of the Amurru and
also why Seti I could claim all the merit for the pacification of the region.
At that time the term “Shasu (Bedouins)” was still used in its original meaning
“those who travel or traverse” but mainly for describing the inhabitants staying in the very
South of Palestine547 (Edomites), but not anymore those in Palestine (Israelites), who were
again called Aamu (Asiatics) as in the past. However, the description of these Shasu around
1200 BCE shows the Egyptian concept on this motley group was negative: He takes what is
left and joined the [ranks of] miserable ones. He mingles with the the tribes of Shasu and disguises himself
as Asiatic (...) Narrow gorge is infested with Shasu hiding in bushes, some of them are 4 or 5 cubits from
head to foot, fierce face, their heart is not soft and they do not lend an ear to the blandishments548. The
Shasu were perceived as perpetual seditious. On stelae, attributed to Ramses II, for
example, one reads: He who has stripped Asiatic kings in their country: he ruined the heritage of
Shasu's country (Stele of the Shardanes); Who reduced to nothing the rebellious nations (...) has been
[bring their tribute to] Shasu's country (Stele V); [Who pushed back] Asiatics, who captured [the people
of] Shasu's country (Stele IX). However, as Shasu from these stela are associated with the
Even the Mitanni, an ally of Egypt, was weak since it collapsed in 1264 BCE after the attack of Assyria.
This Phoenician History was translated into Greek from the Phoenician by Philo of Byblos (64-141).
546 Only two kings of Beirut are known: Yapaḫ-Hadda (1355-1345) and Ammunira (1345-1335). Around 200 BCE Menander of Ephesus
translated the annals of Tyre into Greek (quoted by Flavius Josephus). After the destruction of Carthage in 146 BCE these annals
disappeared. In the same way, the archives of Beirut disappeared in 140 BCE when the city was destroyed by Diodotus Tryphon. Annals
in Phoenician should exist at that time because the handwriting was used by Gideon (Judges 8:13-14).
547 T.E. LEVY, R.B. ADAMS & A. MUNIZ - Archaeology and the Shasu Nomads
in: Le-David Maskil, Ed. Eisenbrauns 2004 pp. 63-89.
548 Pap. Anastasi I:20,3-4; I:23,7-8. Some giant Shasu (between 2 m and 2.50 m!) correspond to the Anakim living in the southwest of
Palestine (Nb 13:22-33).
544
545
167
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
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THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
Hittites (enemies of Egypt) they were Syrians rather than Hebrews, especially as a lintel in
Tell er-Ratabi shows Ramses II in the process of cutting down a Syrian (identifiable by his
hair and his costume). Although Shasu are often mentioned during the reign of Ramses II
(1283-1216) they no longer appear in the conventional list of nine hereditary enemies of
Egypt as can be seen on the temple at Abydos (below):
From left to right: 1) Tḥnw Tehenu (Libya); 2) N-h-r-n Naharin (Mitanni); 3) Sn-g-r Shinar; 4) Ḫ-t Hatti; 5) K-f-tiw Keftiu (Philistia)549; 6) ’I-s-y Asy (Cyprus?); 7) Š3t Shat (Sinai?); 8) ’I-s-rw Assur; 9) Pd-t-ÿ šw-w Bowmen of
Shu[tu] (Moab?).
This change in the designation (of neighbours by Egyptians) means that the
Israelites were no longer perceived as a potential enemy. In contrast, a new concept
appeared550: for Egyptians humankind was made up of “Four Races” (below): Egyptians
(Rmt) at the centre of world, Asiatics (‘3mw) northern Egypt, Nubians (Nḥsy) southern
Egypt and Libyans (Tḥnw) western Egypt. It is noteworthy that the Shasu of Seir
(Edomites), in eastern Egypt, are not mentioned as a major race.
!
One notes that the clothes of these Asiatics living in Palestine have tassels at the 4
corners of their garments. Consequently, this painting corresponds exactly to the biblical
description of the Israelites living in Israel.
Keftiu “those of Crete” was a colony from Crete (Dt 2:23, Jr 47:4, Am 9:7), but it disappeared after the destruction of the palace of
Knossos around 1370 BCE and became “Philistia land” afterward. Salmanazar I destroyed Mitanni in 1264 BCE.
550 T.B. WOODCOCK - Noticing Neighbors: Reconsidering Ancient Egyptian Perceptions of Ethnicity
Cairo 2014, PhD thesis (The American University in Cairo), pp. 8-66.
549
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
If we make an assessment of the Egyptian campaigns in Canaan we see two crucial
points: 1) the objective of these military campaigns was mainly to control Syria, in contrast,
2) Palestine was a country that was systematically avoided by the Egyptians551. In the years
following the Amarna period, the expansionist policies of Hatti and Assyria had led to the
virtual eclipse of Mittanian independence. Of greater concern to Egypt, however was the
situation of Kadesh, the great trading centre of the Orontes Valley, whose chiefs felt
increasing pressure to ally with Hatti552. In his 4th Year, Ramses led his armies through the
subject ports of the Palestinian coast of Byblos, and then advanced into Amurru once
more. The following year in was in position to pounce on Kadesh itself. However, Ramses
came close to disaster and the immediate aftermath of this inconclusive battle was to upset
the status quo in Syria and Palestine, and the armies of Mutawilli were quick to seize the
initiative by regaining control of Amurru and then invading Upe. Ramses, however, was far
from subdued, and led 2 more campaigns in the next five years to reassert his authority in
Canaan, the coastal ports and Amurru but because the aggressive regime of Shalmaneser I
posed a mutual threat for both of them, Ramses in his 21st Year agreed with the new Hittite
emperor, Huttisili II, to stabilize and freeze the political confusion in Amurru.
B. MANLEY – Historical Atlas of Ancient Egypte
London 1996 Ed. Penguin Books pp. 92-93.
552 In spite of peace treaties between the two nations, Hittite and Egyptian armies had clashed near Kadesh at some point during or after
the reign of Tutankhamun. A new dynasty, the 19th, had a military background and felt it was time to reassert the role of the king as warleader, thus Amurru briefly returned to Egyptian control after Seti I engaged a Hittite army near Kadesh. However Seti’s successes were
only preliminary skirmishes in which the two armies appraised the gathering storm: it was his son, Ramses II, who was destined to meet
the armies of Muwatalli II in the climactic battle for control of the Orontes.
551
169
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
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THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
DATING THE ISRAEL STELA OF MERENPTAH (1211 BCE)
The Israel Stela, dated III Shemu 3 year 5 of Merenptah (20 April 1211 BCE), is the
oldest known inscription mentioning the people "Israel", it relates the following events
(line 27): [All] Princes are prostrate, saying: “Shalam (Peace)”. Not one lifts up his head among the
Nine Bows. Now that Tehenu (Libya) has come to ruin, Hatti is pacified; The Canaan has been
plundered into every sort of woe: Ashkelon has been overcome; Gezer has been captured; Yenoam is made
non-existent. Israel is laid waste; his offsprings are no longer; Hurru (southern Syria) is become a widow
because of Egypt. All lands combined, they are at peace; Whoever roams about gets subdued by the King of
Upper and Lower Egypt Merenptah553. Merenptah after having devastated Libya (first goal of
his expedition) was delighted that Israel, mentioned as a people and not as a country, was
laid waste and had no more any offsprings, that is to say any rulers. The pictogram of the
word "seed" is composed of 3 grains so that the one of the inscription has only 1 (drawing
below) and means "offspring/ posterity554" and only this latter sense fits the context.
Although the text of Merenptah is suggesting an intervention in Palestine, historical
context shows that this Pharaoh led only two campaigns (in years 4 and 5 of his reign), first
of all in order to stop the Libyan invasion555, and parallel some police operations to quell a
Nubian insurgency and a few rebel cities in the south of Canaan. Several clues prove that
Merenptah did not go into Palestine: only few cities in southern Canaan (Ashkelon, Gezer)
are mentioned; the name Palestine (Upper Retenu) does not appear in the stele of Israel;
the pharaoh was delighted that Israel was laid waste but he never said he had caused it
which he would certainly done if that had been the case because of his bragging. When
Merenptah said: The Canaan has been plundered, he just meant: “Gaza area” has been plundered556.
The phrase "Israel is devastated, his descendants are no longer" is bewildering and
raises three questions: 1) Is this description taken from real events or is it propaganda? 2)
Why is the term "Israel" used instead of the usual "Palestine (Upper Retenu)"? 3) Why is
the cause of the devastation of Israel not indicated? The campaign in southern Palestine
had to be real for the following reasons: it is well dated and localized, in addition, there is a
very realistic representation of the "taking" of Ashkelon on a wall in Karnak557. However,
although Seti describe it as an overwhelming victory, it was in fact a police operation (and
not a battle) to conduct an eviction, because men (and also some women!) are unarmed and
were pleading Egyptian soldiers to be spared (without fighting). At that time the
inhabitants of Ashkelon should have been mainly Philistines. According to the biblical text
(Jg 1:1-19), the Israelites had invaded the cities of Gaza, Ashkelon and Ekron (in 1463
BCE), but could not conquer them because of the iron tanks of Philistines, these cities
therefore remained under Philistine command. The Amarna letters show that their mayors
were vassals of Egypt. Widya (Indo-Aryan name), for example, the mayor of Ashkelon,
constantly repeats in his letters558 his allegiance to King Amenhotep IV.
W.K. SIMPSON – The Literature of Ancient Egypt
Cairo 2005 Ed. Yale University Press pp. 356-360.
554 R.O. FAULKNER – A Concise Dictionary of Middle Egyptian
Oxford 2002, Ed. Griffith Institute p. 91.
555 C. VANDERSLEYEN - L'Egypte et la vallée du Nil Tome 2
Paris 1995 Éd. Presses Universitaires de France pp. 559-574.
556 H.J. KATZENSTEIN -Gaza in the Egyptian Texts of the New Kingdom
in: Journal of the American Oriental Society 102:1 (1982) pp. 111-113.
557 A. MAZAR – Archaeology of the Land of the Bible
New York 1990 Ed. Doubleday p. 235.
558 W.L. MORAN – Les lettres d'El-Amarna
in: Littératures Anciennes du Proche-Orient 13 (Cerf 1987) pp. 543-547.
553
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
Hori's satirical letter559 confirms important points: the region of Canaan was
reduced to the area around Gaza at that time (Papyrus Anastasi I 27:1); the land of Israel had
no contact with Egypt except with the tribe of Asher to the East of the city of Acco which
was inhabited by the fearsome Shasu led by the famous Chief Qazardi560. This letter is
dated during Sety II's reign (1207-1202) by Gardiner on paleographic grounds, in addition,
the accurate topography given by Hori of the pass in a region which has been identified at
el-Ahwat's area corresponds to a short-lived site dating between 1220-1160 BCE561 and the
virtual campaign in Syria he described is inspired from those of Sety I and Menerptah:
same cities with same enemies: Libyans associated with Sherden belonging to Sea Peoples
(Papyrus Anastasi I 17:3). Hori describes a dangerous area infested with Shasu which fits
accurately to the tribe of Asher (Jos 17:7-11; 19:24-31): Thou hast not gone to the land of Hatti,
thou hast not seen the land of Upi (Damascus area). Khedem (Lebanon?), thou knowest [not] its nature,
nor Yegdy either. What is it like, the Simyra of Sessi (nickname of Ramses II) —life, prosperity, health!?
On which side of it is the city of Aleppo? (19:1) What is its stream like ? Thou hast not gone forth to
Kadesh [on Orontes] and Tubikhi. Thou hast not gone to the region of the Shasu with the bowmen of the
army. Thou hast [not] trodden the road to the Magur, where the sky is darkened by day and it is
overgrown with cypresses and oaks and cedars which reach the heavens. Lions are more numerous than
leopards or bears, (and it is) surrounded by Shasu on (every) side of it. Thou hast not climbed the mountain
of Shawe (Saua in Mount Lebanon region), barefoot, thy hands laid upon [thy bow] (...) Thou awakest,
(20:1) for it is the hour of starting in the sickly night. Thou art alone for the harnessing; no brother comes
for a brother. The sneak-thieves have entered into [the] camp, the horse is untied, the ... has been lost in the
night, and thy clothes have been stolen. Thy groom awoke in the night, saw what he had done, and took
what was left. He has entered among those who are wicked, he has mingled with the Shasu tribes, and he
has made himself into the likeness of an Asiatic (aamu). The foe had come to raid furtively and found thee
inert. When thou awakest, thou findest no trace of them, and they have carried off thy property. (Thus) thou
art become a fully equipped mahir, as thou fillest thy ear (...) Pray, teach me about the appearance of
Qiyen, let me know Rehob, explain Beth-Shan and Tirqa-EL. The stream of (23:1) Jordan, how is it
crossed? Let me know the way to pass Megiddo, which is above it. Thou art a mahir, experienced in deeds
of heroism. A mahir such as thou art should be found (able) to stride at the head of an army! O maryanu,
forward to shoot! Behold, the ambuscade is in a ravine 2000 cubits deep, filled with boulders and pebbles.
Thou makest a detour, as thou graspest the bow. Thou makest a feint to thy left, that thou mightest make
the chiefs to see, (but) their eyes are good and thy hand falters. "Abpaata kamô‘ ir, mahir ne‘am!"
(Thus) thou makest a name for every mahir, officers of Egypt! Thy name becomes like (that of) Qazardi,
the Chief of Asher, when the bear found him in the balsam tree. The narrow valley is dangerous with the
Shasu, hidden under the bushes. Some of them are of 4 or 5 cubits (from) their noses to the heel, and fierce
of face. Their hearts are not mild, and they do not listen to wheedling. Thou art alone; there is no messenger
with thee, no army host behind thee. Qazardi562, the “famous Chief of Asher (’isr)”, is unknown but it
looks like it could be Gideon who gathered an army drawn from several tribes which were
dwelling in Asher's area (Jg 6:33-40). Gideon's exploits (in 1299 BCE) had to be famous
since Sanchuniation, a Phoenician writer, knew them. It is noteworthy that Hori's satirical
letter was copied with a lot of variations and many proper names have been distorted563.
The land of Shasu (Israel) was inhabited by Asiatics (Aamu) at that time:
J.B. PRITCHARD - Ancient Near Eastern Texts
Princeton 1969 Ed. Princeton University Press pp. 475-477.
560 Y. AHARONI – The Land of the Bible
Philadelphia 1979, Ed. The Westminster Press pp. 180-185.
561 S. BAR, D. KAHN, J.J. SHIRLEY – Egypt, Canaan and Israel: History, Imperialism, Ideology and Literature
Leiden 2011 Ed. Brill pp. 348-350.
562 The name Qazardi, written q-3-d-3-ÿ-r-d-ÿ-y and pronounced Qadjaildiye, could be Hebrew (" ? קצרידיShort is my hand").
563 C. TANTAOUI – La lettre satirique d'Hori, le papyrus Anastasi I et les textes parallèles, Volume II
Paris 1987 Thèse de doctorat en égyptologie Paris 3, pp 272-408.
559
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172
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
The name “Israel” appears in the stele of Israel instead of “Palestine (Upper
Retenu)”, because it meant an ethnical entity: Israel is laid waste; his offsprings are no longer, not a
geographical entity, besides the stele of Merenptah mentions a people, not a land. The
word “Upper Retenu (Rtnw ḥrt)” was always used after 1500 BCE564 by the Egyptians to
564
Retenu was used for Syro-Palestine, Upper Retenu (Rtnw ḥrt) for Palestine and Lower Retenu (Rtnw hrt) for Syria.
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
designate Palestine (Israel and Judah), even by Ramses III (1192-1161). The Israelites
became a political entity (with a king and a Chancery) only from Gideon who refused to be
king (Jg 8:22-23; 9:22) but not his son Abimelech (1259-1256). In fact, the first legitimate
king of Israel was Saul (1Sa 8:5-9:16), who reigned over the period 1097-1057. The land of
Israel (Upper Retenu) was regarded by the Egyptians primarily as a geographical entity over
the period 1500-1100 because of the absence of an official king. The Bible replaces the
phrase "the land of Canaan" by "the land" (after -1500), then "the land of Israel" from
King Saul on (1Sa 13:1,19) and the inhabitants are merely called "the sons of Israel". This
distinction is important, for example the geographical entity that is "Naharine"
(Mesopotamia) became a political entity "Mitanni" with the appearance of its first king
Kirta (1500-1485). Thus, from Thutmose III (1472-1418), Egyptian topographical lists565
include both Naharine (n-h-r-ÿ-n) and Mitanni (m-t-n).
The
capture
of
Ashkelon, mentioned in the
stele of Israel, has been
depicted on a fresco (opposite
figure). One can see that the
clothes of the inhabitants of
Ashkelon are of Canaanite type,
which implies they were either
Canaanites,
or
“heathen”
Israelites because usually their
clothes had tassels at the 4
corners of their garments.
Although the city of Ashkelon
was mainly populated by
former Philistines and was
headed by a mayor, vassal of
Egypt, she had a significant
Israelite population (Jg 14:19;
1Sa 6:17, 2Sa 1:20). The context
allows one to understand why
Merneptah wrote: Israel is laid
waste; his offsprings are no longer.
Several texts566 describe foreign invaders (Sea Peoples) from 1212 BCE, who would
have supported a Libyan/Philistine invasion of Egypt, as can be seen on a stele from the
temple of Amada: it was told to His Majesty that the enemy of the border had crossed it at the south.
That happened in year 4, 2nd month of Shemu, 1st day. So then, the valiant army of His Majesty overthrew
the Libyan vile, so that nothing remained of the people of this country (...) He [Merenptah] protects Egypt,
reassures the beloved country. He neglects the Nubians and make that comes on their feet, such as dogs, the
countries of Hatti. Those previously who were ignoring Egypt come from themselves, because of the strength
of the fear he inspired, because of his power. He linked the countries and gave peace to Egyptian lands.
Dated year 5 of Merenptah, 2nd month of Shemu, the vast Karnak inscription reads: The vile
leader, defeated one of Libya, Meriay son of Ded goes down from the country of Libyans with his archers
(...) some Shardanes [from Sardinia], Sicilians [from Sicily], Achaeans, Lycians, Etruscans, having led
the elite of fighters and the warriors of his country. He also brought his wife and children (...) he had
J. SIMONS – Handbook for the Study of Egyptian Topographical Lists Relating to Western Asia
Leiden 1937 Ed. E.J. Brill pp. 207-210.
566 C. LALOUETTE – L'empire des Ramsès
Paris 1985 Éd. Arthème Fayard pp. 268-313.
565
173
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
174
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
reached the western boundary (of Egypt) in the campaign of Perire. According to the Israel Stela (line
27), dated year 5, 3rd month of Shemu, 3rd day: Now that Libya has come to ruin, Hatti is pacified;
The Canaan has been plundered into every sort of woe: Askelon has been overcome; Gezer has been
captured; Yenoam is made non-existent. Israel is laid waste; his offsprings are no longer; Haru is become a
widow because of Egypt. All lands combined, they are at peace; Whoever roams about gets subdued by the
King of Upper and Lower Egypt Merenptah. The chronology of these campaigns shows that the
main purpose of Menerptah was to defeat an invasion coming from Libya, in:
Year 4, 2nd month of Shemu (April 1212 BCE), Pharaoh had overthrown the ruler of
Libya (Tjehenu) and had prevailed on the countries of Hatti (Arzawa, Wilusa?).
Year 5, 2nd month of Shemu (March 1211 BCE), Pharaoh had defeated a ruler of Libya
(Meriay) with his archers whose some were Sardinians, Sicilians, Achaeans, Lycians,
Etruscans having led the elite of fighters and the warriors of his country (Meriay had
brought into Egypt his wife and children).
Year 5, 3rd month of Shemu (April), Libya had come to ruin, Hatti was pacified, Philistia
had been plundered into every sort of woe and Askelon had been overcome.
The purpose of the Libyan invasion was probably to establish a colony in Egypt but
not to attack this mighty country and if some Sea Peoples joined the Libyans, it was likely
for commercial reasons (establishment of a trading centre). Several factors show that these
Sea Peoples had not come to attack Egypt: the number of captives (ex warriors) was low:
about 1,000 out of 10,000, although they had arrived in the 2nd month the Egyptians went
to defeat them only a month later and most of the invaders had no chariotry but only a few
carts drawn by oxen. The list of the loot is given by two documents (KRI IV, 7-9):
Karnak list
Total of captives
Leaders' sons
Sicilians (warriors)
Etruscans (warriors)
Libyans (warriors)
Leader's women
Bronze swords of the Meshwesh (western Libyans)
Horses having carried the leader and his children
Various livestock
Various crockery
Heliopolis list
9,376 Total of captives
6,359
222
742
218
12
9,111 Swords
Bows
Quivers and arrows
12 Horses
1,308 Oxen, donkeys, goats, rams
Gold and silver jewellery
3,174 Bronze vases
9,376
9,268
6,860
128,860
44
11,594
531
3,174
Merenptah introduced his looting as a great victory because he probably felt that
the establishment of the Libyan colony (associated to some Mycenaeans) was a potential
threat to Egypt which had to be quickly neutralized. The choice of Merenptah had to have
deeply disrupted international relations because the Sea Peoples became enemies of Egypt
(in 1211 BCE). As the king of Achaia (in Mycenaea) had previously supported a secession
in western Anatolia (Arzawa) against Hattusili III, King Šuppiluliyama II (1207-1185)
presumably proceeded on a copper embargo toward Achaia because this metal was an
essential element for arming the soldiers. The Mycenaeans were able to continue to supply
themselves with bronze thanks to their allies in Libya and Philistia. It is noteworthy that
Merenptah's military campaigns in Palestine concerned only a few thousand Egyptian
soldiers (maximum 5000) and mainly targeted the Libyans associated with a small fraction
of the Sea Peoples. For example, an Egyptian scribe wrote around 1200 BCE in order to
warn one of his colleague about the problem of a military mission: O alert scribe, understanding
of heart, who is not ignorant at all, torch in the darkness at the head of the troops — and it gives light to
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
them! Thou art sent on an mission to Djahy (Phoenicia) at the head of the victorious army, to crush those
rebels called Ne[h]arin. The bowmen of the army which is before thee amount to 1900; the Sherden 520,
the Qehek 1600, the Meshwesh (100?), and the Negroes 880; total 5000 in all, not counting their
officers. There is brought thee a peace offering before thee: bread, cattle, and wine. The number of men is too
great for thee, whereas the provisions are too small for them. Afterwards the scribe quoted several
regions or towns linked to Egypt: Thou hast not gone to the land of Hatti, thou hast not seen the
land of Upi (Damascus area). Khedem (Lebanon?), thou knowest [not] its nature, nor Yegdy either. What
is it like, the Simyra of Sessi [nickname of Ramses II] —life, prosperity, health!? On which side of it is the
city of Aleppo? What is its stream like ? Thou hast not gone forth to Kadesh [on Orontes] and Tubikhi.
Thou hast not gone to the region of the Shasu with the bowmen of the army. Thou hast [not] trodden the
road to the Magur, where the sky is darkened by day and it is overgrown with cypresses and oaks and
cedars which reach the heavens. Lions are more numerous than leopards or bears, (and it is) surrounded by
Shasu on (every) side of it (...) Let me tell thee of another strange city, named Byblos. What is it like? And
its goddess ? Once again— [thou] hast not trodden it. Pray, instruct me about Beirut, about Sidon and
Sarepta. Where is the stream of the Litani? What is Uzu like (Tyre on the mainland)?" They say another
town is in the sea, named Tyre-the-Port. Water is taken (to) it by the boats, and it is richer in fish than the
sands. Let me tell thee another difficult case —the crossing of Seram. Thou wilt say: It burns more than a
sting! Very sick is the mahir. Come, set (me) on the way southward to the region of Acre. Where does the
Achshaph road come ? At what town ? Pray, teach me about the mountain of User. What is its head"
like ? Where does the mountain of Shechem come ? ... Where does the mahir make the journey to Hazor?
What is its stream like? Put me (on) the track to Hamath, Deger, and Deger-El, the promenade ground of
every mahir. Pray, teach me about its road and show me Yan. If one is traveling to Adummim, which way
is the face? Do not shrink from thy teaching! Guide us (to) know them! Come, that I may tell thee other
towns which lie above them. Thou hast not gone to the land of Takhshi, Kur-mereren, Timnat, Kadesh,
Deper, Azai, or Harnaim. Thou hast not seen Kiriath-Anab and Beth-Sepher. Thou dost not know
Adurun or Zedpet either. Thou dost not know the name of Khenrez, which is in the land of Upi, the bull
upon its boundary, the place where the battle array of every hero may have been seen. Pray, teach me about
the appearance of Qiyen, let me know Rehob, explain Beth-Shan and Tirqa-El. The stream of Jordan,
how is it crossed? Let me know the way to pass Megiddo, which is above it (...) [let me relate to] thee the
[foreign countries] of the end of the land of the Canaan. Thou answerest me neither good nor evil; thou
returnest me no report. Come, let [me] tell thee many things as far as the Fortress of the "Ways [of
Horus]". I begin for thee with the "Dwelling of Sessi —life, prosperity, health!" Thou hast not trodden it
at all. Thou hast not eaten the fish of ... ; thou hast not bathed in it. Pray, let me recall to thee Husayin —
where is its fortress ? Come now to the region of Uto of Sessi —life, prosperity, health!— in his stronghold
of User-maat-Re —life, prosperity, health!— and Seba-El, and Ibsaqab (under Seti I). Let me tell thee
the nature of Aiyanin. Thou knowest not its rules. Nekhes and Hebret, thou hast not seen them since thy
birth. O mahir, where are they? Raphia —what is its wall like? How many iters ("10 km") march is it
as far as Gaza? Answer quickly! Make me a report, that I may call thee mahir and boast to others of thy
name maryanu —so shall I speak to them (Papyrus Anastasi I)567. It is also noteworthy that for
the Egyptians at that time the land of Canaan [under Egyptian control] covered only the
land around Gaza, thus Merenptah's military campaigns in Palestine have actually
concerned mainly the south of the country (Philistia).
After the death of Siptah (c. 1196 BCE), Egypt would experience a split between
two pharaohs (Tausert and Setnakht) that would be a source of instability568. It is precisely
at this time that the Sea Peoples tried to promote an insurrection against Sethnakht (11961192) from Philistia. According to a stele from Elephantine (KRI IV,671-672), a coalition
J.B. PRITCHARD - Ancient Near Eastern Texts
Princeton 1969 Ed. Princeton University Press pp. 475-477.
568 C. VANDERSLEYEN - L'Egypte et la vallée du Nil Tome 2
Paris 1995 Éd. Presses Universitaires de France pp. 391-393.
567
175
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
176
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
of enemies (unspecified!) had been pushed back: His Majesty [Sethnakht] was like his father
Sutek, extending his arms to wrest Egypt to the man who had taken his power, encircling it of magical
protection. So, the enemies in front of him, their hearts were filled with the fear he inspired, and they fled
faster than sparrows, while the prestige of the hawk reached them. And there they left the gold and silver
belonging to Egypt and which had given them the Asiatics, in order that rush to them the victories that
would ensure the dominance over the beloved Country. But their plans failed and their promises were not for
tomorrow (...) Year 2, 2nd month of Shemu, 10th day, it did not remain any more rebels to His Majesty, in
any country, and one could say to his Majesty: O Lord of the earth, your heart is happy that the prophecy of
the gods realized against your enemies, there is no longer in this country and no more any power of infantry
and chariotry, except the one of your father. All the temples were reopened. One can again enter into the
divine stores to increase (their provisions). The beginning of the Papyrus Harris I which
documents the reign of Ramses III, provides some details about Setnakht’s rise to power:
The land of Egypt was overthrown from without, and every man was thrown out of his right; they had no
“chief mouth” for many years formerly until other times. The land of Egypt was in the hands of chiefs and
of rulers of towns; one slew his neighbour, great and small. Other times having come after it, with empty
years. Irsu “a self-made man”, a certain ‘Syran’ (Ḫaru) was with them as chief (wr). He set plundering
their (i.e. the people’s) possessions. They made gods like men, and no offerings were presented in the temples.
But when the gods inclined themselves to peace, to set the land in its rights according to its accustomed
manner, they established their son, who came forth from their limbs, to be ruler, ‘life, prosperity, health’, of
every land, upon their great throne, Userkhaure-setepenre-meryamun, ‘life, prosperity, health’, the son of Re,
Setnakht-merire-meryamun, ‘life, prosperity, health’. He was Khepri-Set, when he is enraged; he set in
order the entire land which had been rebellious; he slew the rebels who were in the land of Egypt; he cleansed
the great throne of Egypt; he was ruler of the Two Lands, on the throne of Atum. He gave ready faces to
those who had been turned away. Every man knew his brother who had been walled in. He established the
temples in possession of divine offerings, to offer to the gods according to their customary stipulations569.
Unusually no name of the invader people is mentioned, but it might have been the Sea
Peoples. The allusion to the infantry and chariotry suggests that these enemies, bribed by
Asiatics (in Palestine), came by land. Inasmuch as the city of Gezer belonged to Kharu area
(Urk. IV,1556,10-11) Irsu had to have resided in the south of Palestine under Egyptian
control (Philistia). The precise date, year 2, 2nd month of Shemu [March 1194 BCE]570,
shows that the goal of Sethnakht's war was to crush a major insurrection, promoted by the
Sea Peoples ("their plans and promises failed"), who came from Philistia.
One can likely conclude that Merenptah to support his vassal mayor (in Ashkelon),
expelled the Israelite residents as well as the new invaders (Sea Peoples), in order to recover
a fully Philistine city. The epoch for intervention in southern Palestine was well chosen
because serious disorders had arisen in Israel after the death of Judge Jair (1233-1211), who
was without a successor for 18 years (Jg 10:5-13): After that Jair died and was buried in Kamon.
Again the Israelites did what was bad in the eyes of Jehovah, and they began to serve the Baals, the
Ashtoreth images (...) They abandoned Jehovah and did not serve him. Then Jehovah’s anger blazed
against Israel, and he sold them into the hands of the Philistines and the Ammonites. So they crushed and
greatly oppressed the Israelites in that year —for 18 years they oppressed all the Israelites on the side of the
Jordan that had been the land of the Amorites in Gilead. The Ammonites would also cross the Jordan to
fight against Judah and Benjamin and the house of Ephraim; and Israel was greatly distressed. Then the
Israelites called to Jehovah for help, saying: We have sinned against you, for we abandoned our God and
served the Baals. But Jehovah said to the Israelites: Did I not save you from Egypt and from the Amorites,
the Ammonites, the Philistines, the Sidonians, Amalek, and Midian when they oppressed you?
J.H. BREASTED – Papyrus Harris I
in: Ancient Records of Egypt Vol. No. 4 (1906) pp. 198-199.
570 Tausert probably died one month earlier (February 1194 BCE).
569
MOSES AND THE EXODUS: WHAT EVIDENCE?
177
Merenptah has therefore timely benefited from circumstances (death of the Israelite leader
who was not replaced) to regain control of Philistia.
CANAAN ACCORDING TO EGYPTIAN DOCUMENTS
It is obvious that the Egyptians did not use the same terms as the Israelites to
designate the land of Canaan and its inhabitants, however the great changes mentioned in
the Bible, such as Exodus, appear filigree in the Egyptian lexicon.
Period (BCE)
2000-1750
1750-1500
1500-1350
1350-1200
1200-1050
1050-900
900-750
Canaan
Retenu
Retenu
Upper Retenu
Upper Retenu
Upper Retenu
(Israel)
Samaria/ Judea
Inhabitants
Aamu
Aamu
Shasu
Shasu
Aamu/ (Shasu)
(Israelites)
Samarians/ Judeans
Capital
Hazor
Hazor
Hazor
Shechem
[Shechem]
Jerusalem
Samaria
Kingdom name
(Hyksos dynasties)
House of Israel
House of David
House of Omri
This summary table confirms the chronology from the Bible: During the period
1750-1500 the Israelites were in Egypt (Hyksos dynasties). When the Israelites left Egypt
for Palestine Pharaoh Seqenenre Taa died dramatically, likewise Iahmes Sapaïr his eldest
son. Forty years later, Hazor was burned and Palestine was occupied by the Shasu
(Bedouins) who appeared suddenly around -1500 (after the conquest of Canaan). The
political entity of Israel appeared around -1200 with Abimelech (1259-1256) its first king
(Jg 9:22-29). The period following the wave of destruction by the Sea Peoples (in 1185
BCE) is called the “dark ages” because there are no documents in this period 1150-850,
except in the Shoshenq I's list (980-959) appears the area called “[Hig]hlan[ds] of David571”.
The archaeologist Yohanan Aharoni and, more recently572, Aaron Burke have
observed that the Bible describes the cities of Canaan as being strongly fortified. This was
true at the end of the Middle Bronze Age (c. -1550), but it was not true at the end of the
Late Ancient Bronze Age (c. -1200), when the prevailing view dates the ethnogenesis of
Biblical Israel. The German scholars cite Israeli scholar Rivka Gonen as noting that at the
end of the Late Bronze Age: the Canaanite towns were frequently unfortified and therefore did not fit
the Biblical descriptions well. Even archaeologist Israel Finkelstein, known largely for his
minimalist views, has suggested, in the words of the German scholars: that the Biblical
tradition likely contains vague memories of the expulsion of the (West Semitic) Hyksos. Because of
frequent chronological imprecisions and because of its inability to identify the ethnicity of
inhabitants, archaeology cannot decide, for example, between the conquest of Canaan by
Joshua and the military campaign of Thutmose III in Palestine573. Without historical
accounts, it is impossible to write history. The arrival of the Israelites in Palestine was a
major event in history which has been commented on by Greek and Roman historians574.
In contrast, Niels Peter Lemche, Professor of Old Testament exegesis at the Faculty of
Theology in Copenhagen, teaches that: The Israelite nation as explained by the biblical writers has
little in the way of a historical background. It is a highly ideological construct created by ancient scholars of
Jewish tradition in order to legitimize their own religious community and its religio-political claims on land
and religious exclusivity (The Israelites in History and Tradition, 1998, pp. 165-166).
K.A. KITCHEN - On the Reliability of the Old Testament
Cambridge 2003 Ed. W.B. Eerdmans p. 615.
572 H. SHANKS - When Did Ancient Israel Begin?
in: Ancient Israel in Egypt and the Exodus (Biblical Archaeology Society 2012) pp. 36-37.
573 E. JUNKKAALA -Three Conquests of Canaan. A Comparative Study of Two Egyptian Military Campaigns and Joshua 10-12 in the
Light of Recent Archaeological Evidence. Ed. Åbo Akademi University Press (2006) pp. 303-312.
574 M. STERN - Greek and Latin Authors on Jews and Judaism
Jerusalem 1976 Ed. Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities pp. 26-34.
571
SCIENTIFIC APPROACH TO AN ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY
178
THROUGH SYNCHRONISMS DATED BY ASTRONOMY
IMPLAUSIBILITY OF EXODUS DURING RAMSES II’S REIGN
Despite much historical and archaeological evidence of the biblical Exodus at
Ahmose’s time, which is confirmed by the Egyptian priest Manetho, biblical scholars teach
that it would have taken place under Ramses II. For example the Jerusalem Bible (Cerf,
1986, p. 1806), which is the official Bible of Catholicism, states that the Exodus occurred in
1250 BCE, during the reign of the famous Ramses II (1290-1224). This choice is manifestly
preposterous because this pharaoh did not perish in the Red Sea (Ps 136:15), he didn't have
to face an Asiatic who was well known to Egyptians (Ex 11:3) and obviously there was
never a disaster that resulted in many deaths in Egypt during his reign (Ex 12:29-33).
The choice of the Jerusalem Bible is based on the opinion of prestigious biblical
scholars as well as prominent Egyptologists. For example the Bible scholar Roland de Vaux
claims575: The indication of I Kings VI:1 is unusable (sic) because the number 480 is artificial (...)
Similarly nothing can be taken of Jud. XI:26 which puts 300 years between the war against Sihon and
time of Jephthah (...) The Bible gives only one valid indication for the date of the exodus, but it is
important. According to Ex. I:11 the Israelites worked on the construction of warehouses cities of Pithom
and Ramses. This information is definitely old and authentic. The exodus is therefore later than the advent
of Ramses II in 1290 BC. The Egyptologist Kenneth Kitchen claims576: Given that we have a
minimum span of 170/160 years for the known judges, prophets, and priests between about 1210/1200
and 1042 (when Saul took over), it is obvious from table 12 that those agents mentioned in the book of
Judges plus 1 Sam. 1-7 cannot have been the total of all the local rulers (“judges” or tribal) that actually
flourished throughout the period. It is simply a selection made by the author of Judges from a fuller tradition
not now available to us (...) It now remains to turn this “relative chronology” into an approximate minimal
chronology in terms of years B.C. Israel is mentioned as in Canaan by Merenptah in his fifth year in 1209
at latest, giving a rounded minimum benchmark of circa 1210. So Joshua, Moses, the wilderness years, and
the exodus are all prior to that date; in theory, Joshua might also have been a contemporary of Merenptah’s
forces’ very brief intrusion, and the elders might have followed him. The absolutely minimal dates for the
exodus and wilderness forty years are between 1260/1250 and 1220/1210. An average at 1255-1215
would then give us 1215-1200 for Joshua and the elders. Thus we may for convenience begin the judges
period proper at about 1200, so far as minimal dating is concerned (...) One datum not in table 15 is
Jephthah’s boast to the king of Ammon, that Israel had occupied the Mishor region east of the Jordan for
300 years (Judg. 11:26). At roughly about 1070, that would place that occupation at about 1370, which
in itself makes no sense whatsoever on any current date of the exodus 40 years before whether in 1447,
1260/1250, or any time in between. Brave fellow that he was, Jephthah was a roughneck, an outcast, and
not exactly the kind of man who would scruple first to take a Ph.D. in local chronology at some ancient
university of the Yarmuk [this portrayal fits with Kitchen better than Jephthah] before making strident
claims to the Ammonite ruler. What we have is nothing more than the report of a brave but ignorant man’s
bold bluster in favour of his people, not a mathematical precise chronological datum. So it can offer us no
practical help. It is in the same class as other statements that biblical writers may well report accurately but
which they would not necessarily expect readers to believe (...) For blustering Jephthah’s propagandistic 300
years —it is fatuous (sic) to use this as a serious chronological datum (...) Here external evidence is more
helpful. First the form of the Sinai covenant. What was found in Exodus-Leviticus, Deuteronomy, and
Josh. 24 excludes not only any date of origin after 1200/1180 but also any date of origin before
1400/1360. Only with Suppiluliuma I (ca. 1360-1320 contemporary of kings Amenophis II to Ay) did
this format come into use. So a Moses in Sinai in 1447 could never have seen a format still to be invented
half a century into the future! What a scholarly muddle (2Tm 4:4).
R. DE VAUX - Histoire ancienne d'Israël des origines à l'installation en Canaan
Paris 1986 Éd. Gabalda p. 365.
576 K.A. KITCHEN - On the Reliability of the Old Testament
Cambridge 2003 Ed. W.B. Eerdmans pp. 205-209,308-310.
575