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03-24-2007, 02:39 PM | #91 |
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Lars, I've been trying to research the claims you make and the resulting theory you set out in your first post of this thread. I'm left with quite a few questions, based on what I've found:
Do you realize that the tomb KV22 of Amenhotep III didn't contain his mummy? and that the mummy in KV35 that might be his, is disputed by some to be so? and that injuries found on the mummified body that might be Amenhotep III's probably happened when tombs were plundered, and then the mummy removed, none too carefully, to KV35 in the 21st dynasty? If that's actually Amenhotep III, his mummified body's plunder and mishandling does not reflect injuries you suggest happened as a result of drowning in the Red Sea. And since the injuries are post-mortem, they don't lend to your suggestion that the embalming method was unusual in order to deal with those injuries. As for Manetho's 'book', there are no remaining copies, and all that is available is what was written about some of his writing describing Osarsiph the "priest of Heliopolis", chiefly by Josephus in Antiquities and Against Appio . The names "Osarsiph" and "Moses" apparently have the same meaning. Did you know that Manetho described (according to Josephus) Osarsiph as an Egyptian who led a group of Hebrew lepers out of Egypt? and that Osarsiph was the founder of monotheism? That sounds less an argument for the reality of a mass Exodus lead by Moses as the Bible describes than an Egyptian story that was borrowed and greatly exaggerated by a group of people who later became Israelites. Your celebration of gaining credibility for an archaeophistorical Exodus just seems a real stretch given the information you've based it on. I'd love to find evidence to support the stories of Exodus, Judges, and Numbers but I've yet to find it. |
03-24-2007, 04:05 PM | #92 | |
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03-24-2007, 05:56 PM | #93 | ||
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Let's bring up another quote from Finklestein in The Bible Unearthed: Quote:
The Hebrew people essentially didn't exist in the 13th century BCE, because they evolved gradually out of native Canaanites during the 10th thru 7th centuries BCE. |
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03-24-2007, 06:30 PM | #94 | |
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spin |
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03-24-2007, 07:31 PM | #95 | |||
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Now I agree, it certainly seems reasonable, especially with the numbers and children, etc. that they should have DROPPED something or broken something. But even that we presume they would have left it there in place where it would have remained without anyone subsequently retrieving it or anything. Further some known historial cities have completely disappeared apparently, perhaps because of the materials used, not stone but wood? So I'm just tempering a bit so that we know it's like studying the Egyptians versus the Arabs living in the desert and what you expect to find. People living in tents and grass huts compared to brick and stone dwellings, etc. People writing on clay vs skins and papyrus. Quote:
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Well, that's certainly not true. But let's go with "Where's all the evidence of these very clean, tent-dwelling nomads whose clothing didn't wear out in 40 years at? Someone should have dropped something that wasn't picked up in 3300 years for us to know they were there!" Something metallic, or clay, right? Investigation continues for the conquering of Canaan details. The Exodus and Ten Plauges are a historical reality. Larsguy47 |
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03-24-2007, 07:39 PM | #96 | ||
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That's my take on it, anyway. Thanks for the refinement! Larsguy47 |
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03-24-2007, 08:01 PM | #97 | ||
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Point being, we don't know enough to expect the "norm" here in this case so the absence of the walls just might confirm something unusual rather than this event not happening. A chief criticism of Finkelstein, though I'm a big fan, is that he doesn't include enough of the apparent scenarios before he stakes a whole big argument on something. Like coming up with his own idea as to why Shishak, if he wasn't attacking Rehoboam per the Bible, would attack all those northern cities, thus having "no geopolical" reason to do so. But in fact, Shishak's invasion was during the reign of Solomon, likely his 39th year and so the attack on the northern cities was an attack on Rehoboam's domain at the time. That completely takes the wind out of the sails of his theory that Shishak was coming to these really underdeveloped cities (yeah right, that's why he listed 100 of them in his inscription? just small rural towns of some nobodies--jot cha!). So that doesn't work. Plus when you correct the chronology, either by the timing for Jericho and the Exodus at with Akhenaten or the specific RC14 dating from Rehov, dating Solomon to a later period and Shishak as well, then these were powerful, fortified cities 54-60 years later, so Shishak was attacking a different region entirely. So alot of Finkelstein's arguments seem to work best when he has the wrong chronology but fall flat when the corrected Biblical chronology is actually applied. So I don't know. If the Jews in the wilderness were super "neat freaks" (not a derogatory term) and picked up every little piece of anything they dropped and then when they left had a special crew to really clean up the place, maybe even replant some trees or something, then I'm wondering what would be left for archaeologists to find after all these years? The only nonbiodegradable things are metal and clay, right? So I don't know. Maybe the total lack of evidence proves just that, that they were far cleaner and neater than we imagine them to be. People living in tents usually travel light, have few uncessary "decorative" possessions and take everything with them when they move from place to place. Larsguy47 |
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03-24-2007, 08:09 PM | #98 | |
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EA 29.55fWho is responsible for this deceit you are spreading, Larsguy47? spin |
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03-24-2007, 09:33 PM | #99 | |
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(I know, I know... the Jews had helium ballons up their asses so they were light on their feat...) :huh: |
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03-24-2007, 09:59 PM | #100 | |||||||||||||||
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From RED DAVE:
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Start your reading here. http://www.iidb.org/vbb/showthread.p...threadid=68469 Larsguy47: Quote:
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I know we Jews are in the garment industry, but garments that don't wear out, we never got to. Blue jeans, yes. Garments that don't wear out, no. Larsguy47: Quote:
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