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Old 03-29-2007, 01:19 AM   #21
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Originally Posted by spamandham View Post
...an aside, did anyone else notice that the tombs are all shaped like crosses?
You are giving away my plot! That xianity is actually a Persian offshoot!
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Old 03-29-2007, 04:55 AM   #22
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We can scratch another silly excuse for a thread because once again Larsguy47 got it wrong. As I pointed out in post #6 he didn't understand his source document and that was the cause of his lunacy.

He hasn't responded to my #6, but I don't think he needs to. There's probably nothing meaningful he can say to stitch his espoused view up.


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Old 03-29-2007, 10:28 AM   #23
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Originally Posted by Larsguy47
Ezra 6:14,15 calls him "Artaxerxes" but doesn't mention any Xerxes in the Bible at all.
6 At the beginning of the reign of Xerxes, [b] they lodged an accusation against the people of Judah and Jerusalem.
7 And in the days of Artaxerxes king of Persia, Bishlam, Mithredath, Tabeel and the rest of his associates wrote a letter to Artaxerxes. The letter was written in Aramaic script and in the Aramaic language.
- Ezra 4:6-7 (NIV)

According to the footnotes for Ezra 4, "Xerxes" is the translation of the Hebrew "Ahasuerus", which is "a variant of Xerxes' Persian name".

As already pointed out, the bible refers to "Darius the Mede" "son of Ahasuerus". If Ashasuerus is the same name as Xerxes, the Darius the Mede was a son of Xerxes.

Darius the Great (Darius I) was a son of Hystaspes, according to the inscription on Darius' tomb http://www.livius.org/da-dd/darius/darius_i_t01.html

Therefore, the Bible, which is your only source for a historical person called Darius the Mede son of Ashasuerus/Xerxes, says that Darius the Mede and Darius the Great/Darius I are not the same person.

In your opening post on this thread you state:
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Instead, if we follow the Bible, the building records record correctly Persepolis was begun in the 4th year of Darius...
Are you referring to the Bible verse you quoted from Ezra to support your claim of Persepolis' construction begun in the 4th year of Darius and completed in the 6th year??? The descriptions of building in the book of Ezra are about rebuilding the Hebrew Temple in Jerusalem by permission of Cyrus king of Babylon in his 1st year of reign, not about building Persepolis in Parsa.

And again I'll point out that the Bible does not say that Darius the Mede ruled for only 6 years.

It appears that Issac Newton made the same error you are perpetuating by trying to prove Darius the Mede was an actual person merely because the Bible says he was.
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Old 03-29-2007, 10:54 AM   #24
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I can't, I think they're in the British Museum.
Come back when you can produce them.

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But all the alternative names are known for the other two Artaxerxes: Artaxerxes II was "Mneumon," and Artaxerxes III was "Nothus." That leaves Artaxerxes I as "Xerxes."

Artaxerxes I was known as "ARTAXERXES, LONGIMANUS" called that by the Greeks because his right hand was longer than his left.
Wrong. Longimanus was Latin, not Greek. The Greek is plainly given above: Greek Macrocheir.

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Longimanus means long hand. That has nothing to do with his Persian alternative name, which he doesn't have one generally as XERXES nor as ARTAXERXES. Two different names, not a combined name like "Artaxerxes, Longimanus".
The other names we have for these rulers (Cyrus, Xerxes, etc.) are all Greek versions of Persian words. So these alternate names you're referring to would be Greek names as well.

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So sorry you got that mixed up.
Problem is you are the one who got it mixed up.

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But while we're at it, of course. If Artaxerxes and Xerxes were the same king, one would expect, indeed, that he would be showing off his famous longer right hand, right? Well he does! Here we find Xerxes with his hand longer right hand turned sidewise behind the throne.
1. You have an active imagination. As the photo says, this is Darius, with his son Xerxes.

2. Artists and sculptors of the time did not understand scale or perspective, which is why attempts at three-dimensional depictions of people look awkward. "Walk like an Egyptian" - that's why the tomb paintings look funny. An outstretched hand was longer than a hand grasping something, because it was more 2D than 3D.

3. For comparison purposes:
* Look below at the 1st picture.
* Now look at the the official standing two figures behind the throne (left side of the first picture).
* Now look at his outstretched hand (laid over his wrist)

The hand of this carved official is the same length as the outstretched hand of Xerxes. Ergo, nothing special was intended by the length of Xerxes' hand, since the sculptor appeared to carve all outstretched hands to the same length.

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Elsewhere in smaller depictions he is actually holding onto the throne, palm down, suggesting he's "sharing" the throne and co-ruler, of course, which he was. But his hand was apparently so famous, that in this close-up, which shows his hand in one relief from the palm side and another from the back side supports that, indeed, not only was he the same king, but his famous longer hand was getting attention and likely already famous and he's saving here for posterity in these two scenes:
No, these are matching (left and ride side) carvings inside the throne room. They are mirror images of each other, depicting the same scene. The only difference is that they are reversed right-to-left. They were obviously on facing sides of the same hallway or entranceway.





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You misread or misunderstood.
Neither. You just can't tell the difference between Latin and Greek. And you apparently don't know that all Persian names we have today are actually Greek.

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But, yes, because of that anomally, guess who has his hand very much in display above? None other than XERXES!
Wrong. That is Darius.

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This was a common revisionist practice back then when they wanted to camouflage history.
1. Uh, no. It was not.

2. You didn't answer my statement: there would have been no reason to camouflage this history.

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Now, if this is too new and too far out for you, don't fret.
It's not far out; it's simply incorrect.


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Sorry, you're right.
Get used to saying that.

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Hmmm! It was the BABYLONIAN CHRONICLE:

Here's a quick reference, but you can look up lots on the net under "Babylonian Chronicle"
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Thanks for the comments. I have to research to find my other references. I do need to be more specific and accurate, I trust my memory too much.
Good. I hope you understand that we won't be taking your memory as a supporting citation for any of these claims.

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Anyway, plesae check out Sir Isaac Newton's history
Newton's reference was the bad history in Daniel. No help for your argument there.
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Old 03-29-2007, 11:34 AM   #25
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I can't, I think they're in the British Museum.
...with my wife.... Morgan Fairchild, whom I've seen naked. Yeah, that's the ticket.
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Old 03-29-2007, 11:52 AM   #26
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So, Larsguy47: Now we have: (a) a mysterious book that says that Aristotle and Socrates were lovers; (b) an assertion of a man being banned from the British Museum because he knew too much; (c) astronomical texts that aren't available' and (d) a mysterious identification between Nehemiah and Esther.

People might think you're ... up to something. (4 gold stars if you get the reference).

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Old 03-29-2007, 12:20 PM   #27
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Originally Posted by Larsguy47 View Post
I was talking abou the palace he started but didn't finish. That only took two years.
The whole first building phase, is given as 28 years, and Darius still lived for 4 years, after that. The palace still wasn't done. He finished the leveling of the ground, cutting into the mountainside, building the decorative and massive terrace (135000 square metres...covers 33 acres...to compare, the base of the great pyramid of Giza was about 53000 square metres), and cutting a piped drainage system into it. He finished most of the Apadana (the largest structure, with 72 20m high columns to support the roof, 5m thick walls, 4 towers...large enough to hold some 10000 people), Xerxes finished the 4 towers, and exterior. Darius finished the Treasury, and started his elaboratly carved Palace.

Besides, finishing his father's palace, Xerxes started building his own palace. Xerxes is said to have reigned for 21 years, and didn't finish his own personal palace...just like his father. His son, Artaxerxes, did. Artaxerxes also finished the throne room, started by Xerxes.

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A1Pb, Babylonian inscription from the Hall of Hundred Columns, Persepolis
[Babylonian inscription on a slab of stone.]
King Artaxerxes says: My father, king Xerxes, laid the foundations of this palace.

With the protection of Ahuramazda, I, king Artaxerxes, have finished it.
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Nothing. This was found in the foundation of the Throne Hall. His father had already died. But his grandfather was still alive.
What? For one, his grandfather was never a king, so wasn't co-ruler of anything. He was a military general. Secondly, Darius' father, Hystaspes, is said to have died, about a decade, before him, so wasn't alive, when Xerxes took the throne. You may be thinking of Darius' father and grandfather both being alive, when he took the throne.

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I'm talking about the main works. I know that Artaxerxes III built there, I'm not counting his tomb. Just the palaces, the throne hall, the treasury, the Apadama, the harem, etc. Sorry for not being more specific. Xerxes finished everything started by Darius in his 7th year meaning everything took only 5 years to build since Xerxes and Darius were co-rulers for 4 years.
There was 32 years of building, before Darius died! Are you starting your count, after the terrace area was built and carved out of a mountain.....by Darius?

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SO HERE'S THE TEST: Let's see if an archaeologist can give us a reference on how long those 11 buildings would have taken Xerxes to finish based upon other buildings that were built and finished. Is this is 57-year project, or could it have been completed in just 7 or 8 years?
Who cares how long it "could have" taken to complete. I thought we were discussing how long it did take to complete? Where did you get your 2 year estimate from?

Not only was it a massive project, and we've left out all the planning time that would have been necessary, but Persia was a non-slave nation. Darius had previously started, and managed to finish, a similar apadana and palace, in Susa, which he describes...

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3e. (22-7.) This palace which I built at Susa, from afar its ornamentation was brought. Downward the earth was dug, until I reached rock in the earth. When the excavation had been made, then rubble was packed down, some 40 cubits in depth, another (part) 20 cubits in depth. On that rubble the palace was constructed.

3f. (28-30.) And that the earth was dug downward, and that the rubble was packed down, and that the sun-dried brick was molded, the Babylonian people -- it did (these tasks).

3g. (30-5.) The cedar timber, this -- a mountain named Lebanon -- from there was brought. The Assyrian people, it brought it to Babylon; from Babylon the Carians and the Ionians brought it to Susa. The yakâ-timber was brought from Gandara and from Carmania.

3h. (35-40.) The gold was brought from Sardis and from Bactria, which here was wrought. The precious stone lapis lazuli and carnelian which was wrought here, this was brought from Sogdiana. The precious stone turquois, this was brought from Chorasmia, which was wrought here.

3i. (40-5.) The silver and the ebony were brought from Egypt. The ornamentation with which the wall was adorned, that from Ionia was brought. The ivory which was wrought here, was brought from Ethiopia and from Sind and from Arachosia.

3j. (45-9.) The stone columns which were here wrought, a village named Abiradu, in Elam -- from there were brought. The stone-cutters who wrought the stone, those were Ionians and Sardians.

3k. (49-55.) The goldsmiths who wrought the gold, those were Medes and Egyptians. The men who wrought the wood, those were Sardians and Egyptians. The men who wrought the baked brick, those were Babylonians. The men who adorned the wall, those were Medes and Egyptians.
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Well, maybe, but doutful. The first three tombs were sculpted by the same sculptor, whereas the 4th tomb for "Xerxes" who should have been in tomb #2 instead of tomb #4 is so new the artwork is "imitated." Furthermore, no inscriptions for any of the tombs are present except for Darius. Darius' tomb is the only one specifically identified as his. Now if they waited until they died to actually have the tomb carved out of the cliff and imitated the artwork of Darius' tomb, they certainly would have followed the complete pattern and showed themselves on the face of the tomb and identified themselves. But they didn't. They were just buried in their respective tombs and that's it. They didn't bother with any engraving.
Sculpted by the same sculptor? Where's your evidence? I would have thought something that size, would take multiple sculptors.

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Oh yeah. In earlier times, but not down this far. Sure they were living past 100 or so even now, a few. But if Nehemiah was already a copyist, he would have been at least 30. To live down into the reign of Darius I would have been another 115 years. Let's see: Cyrus 9, Cambyses 8, Darius I 36, Xerxes 21, Art2 41. 145 years and counting. Regardless most consider that way too old, even for Jews and prefer to pretend that the "Nehemiah" that returns with Zerubbabel is a different Nehemiah than was the cupbearer for Artaxerxes. (yeah, right!) When the Jews had to suppress Ezra/Nehemiah and substituted with apocryphal "Esdars II, III" they clearly meant to separate Nehemiah from Artaxerxes so just wrote about his activities upon returning from Babylon. So the Jews clearly know this is the same Nehemiah as the one who was cupbearer to Artaxerxes, you need only compare the substitute history.
How can anyone "know this is the same Nehemiah as the one who was cupbearer to Artaxerxes", when there's no evidence that Artaxerxes had a cupbearer named Nehemiah, or Marduka? There's no evidence that tablets with the name Marduka, all refer to the same person. In fact, they think they represent up to 4 different people. The highest ranking one, that I know of, being an accountant/scribe.

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This proves the Jews helped to hide the identity of Xerxes to avoid a war and also because they greatly liked Xerxes/Artaxerxes who also liked them a lot, especially Nehemiah. But he had reason to because he was prophesied about in their Bible (Daniel 11:2), and about what he would do, including fighting against Greece. That's lkely why Nehemiah was so fixated on him. But as you can see from the bas-reliefs, Nehemiah was already his cupbearer even before Darius died!
ROFL! Prove it's Nehemiah. I want a relief with his name inscribed.

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You can identify Nehemiah by his special dress and his beard being covered. Nehemiah was a eunuch. Plus his position as cupbearer was the highest ranking court position, the equivalent to the Prime Minister. You can tell he is the cupbearer because he his holding his "badge of office" a cuptowel in his hand.
Persia had lots of eunichs, and you've got zero evidence to attach a name to the person in the reliefs. You don't even have evidence that it's the same person.

Oh look...there's Nehemiah, again, as a servant of Artaxerxes III, but it seems he got himself demoted. The Persian kings probably didn't appreciate the long vacation in Palestine. How old is he now?



Oh look...he's actually a set of quadruplets. Or, is it quintuplets...is there another Nehemiah with the king?



And, they go on to call many other Nehemiahs, mere servants, Arians, and other nonsense. You really need to get down there and school them that every Beard covered dude, is, in fact, Nehemiah. And, you've got a Bible, to prove it.

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Total you're just in denial. But anyway, DON'T BELIEVE just yet. Just keep getting informed and learning about all the problems. You're doing good! And thanks for all the photos! Much appreciated.
Stop trying to make us uninformed, then. Much appreciated.


Peace
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Old 04-01-2007, 05:46 AM   #28
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Originally Posted by Larsguy47 View Post
Ezra 6:14,15 calls him "Artaxerxes" but doesn't mention any Xerxes in the Bible at all.
This is certainly not correct. Ahasuerus, ie Xerxes is found in Ezra 4:6 in Hebrew, Greek and Latin.

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Originally Posted by Larsguy47 View Post
Some have tried to insert Xerxes as "Ahasuerus" in Esther, but the LXX version of that book clearly shows her married to Artaxerxes the "son of Xerxes" and likewise, Josephus, depicts Esther with Artaxerxes following Ezra and Nehemiah whom he places with Xerxes.
While Josephus may have used a Greek translation anyway, the Hebrew clearly has Ahasuerus, as does the Vulgate. This should mean that the Greek is at odds with the original form of the text.

But then, who cares? when the Persian literature indicates that the two names were for separate people, as does Herodotus, as I have cited elsewhere.


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Old 04-01-2007, 12:22 PM   #29
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This is certainly not correct. Ahasuerus, ie Xerxes is found in Ezra 4:6 in Hebrew, Greek and Latin.
Please, please pay attention to your references. Ezra 4:6 indeed mentions an "Ahasuerus" but this king is followed by an "Artaxerxes" during whose reign the temple work is stopped. The "Artaxerxes" and "Xerxes" we are dealing with come after Darius, who restarted the temple work which was completed in his sixth year, the year he died, by "Artaxerxes". So here are the Biblical equivalents to the historical kings:

CYRUS = "Cyrus"
KAMBYSES = "Ahasuerus" (Ezra 4:6)
BARDIYA/SMERDIS = "Artaxerxes" (Ezra 4:7)
DARIUS I = "Darius"
XERXES/ARTAXERXES, LONGIMANUS = "Artaxerxes" (Ezra 6:14; Daniel 11:2)
DARIUS II = "Darius" (Nehemiah 12:22)

Neh 12:22 "22 The Levites in the days of E·li´a·shib, Joi´a·da and Jo·ha´nan and Jad´du·a were recorded as heads of paternal houses, also the priests, down till the kingship of Da·ri´us the Persian. "

Ezra 4:4 At that the people of the land were continually weakening the hands of the people of Judah and disheartening them from building, 5 and hiring counselors against them to frustrate their counsel all the days of Cyrus the king of Persia down till the reign of Da·ri´us the king of Persia. 6 And in the reign of A·has·u·e´rus [KAMBYSES], at the start of his reign, they wrote an accusation against the inhabitants of Judah and Jerusalem. 7 Also, in the days of Ar·ta·xerx´es [BARDIYA/SMERDIS], Bish´lam, Mith´re·dath, Tab´e·el and the rest of his colleagues wrote to Ar·ta·xerx´es the king of Persia, and the writing of the letter was written in Ar·a·ma´ic characters and translated into the Ar·a·ma´ic language."

The letter to Bardiya/Smerdis ("Artaxerxes") is what resulted in the temple work being stopped, even though the new walls were finished during this reign. Not until the 2nd year of Darius did the work begin again, and then it was completed in his sixth year by Xerxes, who by now had adopted the new name of "Artaxerxes" as well and so is called "Artaxerxes" at Ezra 6:14,15 and named as the last Persian king to have been involved with the building of the temple.

So, lots of "Artaxerxeses" and "Dariuses" to try to figure out, so one must keep them in order and not get them mixed up.


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While Josephus may have used a Greek translation anyway, the Hebrew clearly has Ahasuerus, as does the Vulgate. This should mean that the Greek is at odds with the original form of the text.
The fact that the LXX (Greek) has Esther married to Artaxerxes proves the book is non-inspired and just a fable. Josephus knew this and knew that the "Mordecai" in the Book of Esther was a reference to the work and greatness of Nehemiah, likely a direct reference to how Artaxerxes honored him in the bas-reliefs at Persepolis, showing him with him alone in some instances:



Nehemiah 10:3 "Mor´de·cai’s [NEHEMIAH'S] greatness with which the king magnified him, are they not written in the Book of the affairs of the times of the kings of Me´di·a and Persia? 3 For Mor´de·cai the Jew was second to King A·has·u·e´rus [LXX, "ARTAXERXES"] and was great among the Jews and approved by the multitude of his brothers, working for the good of his people and speaking peace to all their offspring."

As you can see, Nehemiah is always second to Xerxes/Artaxerxes as proven by the artwork at Persepolis. Josephus apparently understood, therefore, that the Book of Esther was really a cryptic reference to the history of Nehemiah which had been left out of the revised version of "Esdras". Josephus thus clearly mentions both Ezra and Nehemiah during the reign of "Xerxes" and places Esther and Mordecai's history after that. But it's just a different version of the same story. It was not an error to place Ezra and Nehemiah during the time of Xerxes because Xerxes and Artaxerxes were the same king. Also relating the story of Esther and Mordecai during the time of Artaxerxes was okay since Mordecai was Nehemiah and so was Esther. Nehemiah was a eunuch and in old Jewish fables he was depicted as very effeminate and in love with Artaxerxes, so that part of the story got "sanitized" by making the romance side of that story carried by the character of a Jewess, Esther, who becomes the woman the king loves who rescues her people by getting them to take up arms. But this is just a beautiful version of Nehemiah's story and how he did the same thing.

During this time the books of Daniel and Ezra/Nehemiah were suppressed since they exposed that Xerxes and Artaxerxes were the same king. Apocryphal "Esdras II, III" was written and the Book of Esther continued the story as "Esdras IV." But later when the books resurfaced, obviously there were conflicts, particularly with the LXX Book of Esther showing Esther married to Artaxerxes. So it was rewritten to show her married to "Ahasuerus" which some thus feel free to displace as a reference to "Xerxes."

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But then, who cares? when the Persian literature indicates that the two names were for separate people, as does Herodotus, as I have cited elsewhere.
Listen, everybody is not cut out for some of the more esoteric readings of history. They expect everything to be truthful direct and in black and white, but that's just not the case.

The LXX version has Esther married to Artaxerxes. That's what you have to focus on and deal with. That's a critical contradiction of Ezra/Nehemiah. It is not fixed by simply sweeping it under the rug because you have a revised Hebrew version that works with the revised history. It doesn't work that way. Josephus has her married to Artaxerxes, the "son of Xerxes" as well.

LG47
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Old 04-01-2007, 12:36 PM   #30
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So, Larsguy47: Now we have: (a) a mysterious book that says that Aristotle and Socrates were lovers; (b) an assertion of a man being banned from the British Museum because he knew too much; (c) astronomical texts that aren't available' and (d) a mysterious identification between Nehemiah and Esther.

People might think you're ... up to something. (4 gold stars if you get the reference).

RED DAVE
Omigosh! I'm being followed! That is SO ON POINT!

But those are just the "mysterious things". You forgot the upfront stuff which is direct and absolute:

1. I have two quotes in Manetho linking Akhenaten with the Exodus. One that gives the year Joseph was appointed vizier and another that says it was the sister of Thuthmosis III that adopted Moses. Both point to Akhenaten at the time of the Exodus and Amenhotep III dying in the Red Sea (not directly, just the change of rulership!!) Nothing you can do about these references. They are there. Reliable or not. Not hidden in my closet.

2. I have KATHLEEN KENYON'S dating for the fall of Jericho by the Israelites between 1350-1325BCE along with cartouches found at LBIIA Jericho (same level) from Amenhotep III, again linking the Exodus to the time of Amenhotep III and Akhenaten. That dating dates the Exodus between 1390-1365BCE. Again, direct reference.

3. I have the KTU 1.78 eclipse. Sure it has problems and it's circumstantial but has been used elsewhere to try and date the Amarna Period and the 12th of Akhenaten. One of four dates has always been 1375BCE so when that is applied you get 1386BCE for the 1st of Akhenaten. Thus a potentially FIXED date for the Exodus, extra-Biblically. Of note, 1947 requires the Exodus to fall in 1386BCE, period. So I'm on a roll here!

4. "The DELIAN PROBLEM" which confirms that Plato was an adult when the Peloponnesian War began.

5. I have plenty of Evidence that Nehemiah was already cupbearer during the time of Darius and Xerxes as co-rulers at Persepolis.

6. I have evidence that Artaxerxes I was buried between Darius I and Darius II where "Xerxes" should have been!

7. I have archaeological connection between Level City IV at Rehov dated to 871BCE which is my date for Shishak's invasion based upon 1386BCE! The chart clearly shows the 95.4% probability range for 918-823BCE which if you locate the middle of that range you get 870.5 (871BCE).




So you see, I've already proven my point without conspiracy theory stuff!

I don't need the theories to establish the dating for the Exodus. Those things are just the supplements.

LG47
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