by
Damien F. Mackey
The
Patriarchs Abraham, Isaac, Jacob,
Joseph, and Moses, span the entire period
of
Egyptian history from the very first king of the First Dynasty of the Old
Kingdom
to,
in the case of Moses, the last (woman) ruler king of the so-called Middle
Kingdom.
Egyptologists have created too many Egyptian
kingdoms and dynasties.
Likewise, regarding the early history of the earth,
we are presented with a vast succession of Geological Ages reaching back, say,
4 billion years ago, give or take.
Palaeontology takes us back through the supposedly
successive Stone Ages a far more modest 2-3 million years.
Archaeological Ages then follow these earlier ages,
all nicely set out in linear, or “Indian file”, fashion. This system, however,
is quite artificial, not according with reality. Hence, the already challenging
task of trying to marry, particularly the Archaeological Ages, with the
historical kingdoms and their dynasties, might seem to have become well-nigh
impossible.
Thankfully, though, Dr. John Osgood has already
made the task far more manageable, at least, with his “A Better Model for the
Stone Ages” series, in which the linear model is rejected on the basis of hard
evidence.
And, regarding the conventional arrangement of the
Egyptian Kingdoms (Old, Middle, New), which, too, is linear, Dr. Donovan
Courville has argued for the Old and Middle Kingdoms, conventionally separated
as to beginnings by (2600-2040 =) about 560 years, to be recognised as being
(in part) synchronous.
Here, embracing Dr. Courville’s general thesis
(though with quite a different application of it), I would like to attempt to
fill out that first ruler of the Old (or Archaïc) Kingdom era of Egypt - the
contemporary of Abraham and Isaac - by enfleshing him with a so-called Middle
Kingdom aspect or dimension as well.
EXPANDING MENES
Just as I had earlier suggested that the
Noachic Flood, when properly deciphered, might serve to bring into some sort of
coherent synthesis those unwieldy and vast Geological Ages, so, too, do I
believe that the Patriarchs of Genesis (Abraham, Isaac, Jacob and Joseph), in
company with Moses of the Pentateuch, may serve to tidy up the early Egyptian
Kingdoms and dynasties.
And here is a preview of how I think it
may be done.
In the course of this book I shall be
proposing that those aforementioned Patriarchs and Moses span the entire period of Egyptian history
from the very first king of the First Dynasty of the Old Kingdom (as we have
already learned) to (and even slightly beyond), in the case of Moses, the last
king (actually a woman) of the so-called Middle Kingdom.
Here is the schematic outline of it, with
consideration of a possible Second/Tenth
Dynasty connection to Abraham and Isaac to follow after it:
Abraham and Isaac (1, 2, 10
dynasties);
Joseph (3, 11 dynasties);
Moses (4-6, 12-13 dynasties).
Dynasties 7-9, which are thought to have
followed the collapse of Egypt’s Old Kingdom as a First Intermediate Period (c. 2181-2055 BC), are
omitted here.
Dr. Courville identified this period of
confusion with the so-called Second
Intermediate Period (c. 1782-1570 BC), and I would
basically accept this parallel revision of his.
The implications of the drastic revision
that I have outlined above are that a period of Egyptian history Sothically
calculated as spanning, very roughly, (3100-1780 =) 1320 years, was actually
the same 430-year period that we had calculated from the arrival of Abram in
Canaan, aged 75, down to the Exodus under Moses.
This is a time discrepancy between Egypt
and the Bible of a whacking (1320-430 =) 890 years!
In terms of the Early Bronze Ages (I-IV),
these can neatly be set out (to be elaborated on) as:
Abraham and Isaac (EBI);
Jacob and Joseph (EBII);
Moses (EBIII/IV).
Now, in fashion similar to my condensing
of the Akkadian dynasty by identifying alter
egos, or duplicate rulers, so here do I intend to shorten the early
Egyptian history which, I think, fits so poorly against the biblical
record.
The king of Egypt
at the time of Abram (Abraham) I have identified as the first ruler of the First Dynasty, the very long-reigning
Menes Hor-Aha (‘Min’).
And I have been
able - following the structure of the Book of Genesis (toledôt and chiasmus) - to link that ruler with the Abimelech known
to Abram (Genesis 20:2) and to Isaac (26:1).
Whilst Abimelech (אֲבִימֶ֙לֶךְ֙) is a
Hebrew name, meaning “My Father is King”, I
noted that it had a structure and meaning rather similar to that of the
supposedly Second Dynasty Egyptian
king, Raneb (or Nebra): that is, “Father Ra
is King”.
Before I had come to the
conclusion that Abram’s ruler of Egypt belonged to the First Dynasty, I had thought - the same as David Rohl, although
quite independently of him - that that ruler must have been the Tenth Dynasty’s Khety.
Rohl numbers him as Khety IV
Nebkaure, whereas I had numbered the same ruler as Khety III (N. Grimal, I
note, has a Khety II Nebkaure, A History
of Egypt, pp. 144, 148).
If the so-called Tenth Dynasty were really to be located
this early in time, I had thought, then this would have had major ramifications
for any attempted reconstruction of Egyptian history. Having Abram’s Egyptian
ruler situated in the Tenth Dynasty did
fit well with my view then, at least, that Joseph, who arrived on the scene
about two centuries after Abraham, had belonged to the Eleventh Dynasty (as well as to the Third, as Imhotep).
Although I would
later drop from my revision the notion of Khety (be he II, III or IV) as
Abraham’s king of Egypt - not being able to connect him securely to the Old
Kingdom era - I am now inclined to return to it.
Previously I had
written on this:
So far, however, I have not
been able to establish any compelling link between the 1st and 10th Egyptian
dynasties (perhaps Aha “Athothis” in 1 can connect with “Akhthoes” in 10).
Nevertheless, that pharaoh Khety appears to have possessed certain striking
likenesses to Abram’s [king] has not been lost on David Rohl as well, who, in From Eden to
Exile: The Epic History of the People of the Bible (Arrow Books,
2003), identified the “Pharaoh” with Khety (Rohl actually numbers him as Khety
IV). And he will further incorporate the view of the Roman author, Pliny, that
Abram’s “Pharaoh” had a name that Rohl considers to be akin to Khety’s
prenomen: Nebkaure.
Here, for what it is worth, is
what I have written about pharaoh Khety III:
There is a somewhat obscure
incident in 10th dynasty history, associated with … Wahkare Khety III and the
nome of Thinis, that may possibly relate to the biblical incident [of “Pharaoh”
and Abram’s wife]. It should be noted firstly that Khety III is considered to
have had to restore order in Egypt after a general era of violence and food
shortage, brought on says N. Grimal by “the onset of a Sahelian climate,
particularly in eastern Africa” [A
History of Ancient Egypt, Blackwell, 1994, p. 139].
Moreover, Khety III’s “real
preoccupation was with northern Egypt, which he succeeded in liberating from
the occupying populations of Bedouin and Asiatics” [ibid., p. 145]. Could these eastern nomads have been the
famine-starved Syro-Palestinians of Abram’s era - including the Hebrews
themselves - who had been forced to flee to Egypt for sustenance? And was Khety III referring to the Sarai incident when, in his
famous Instruction addressed to his son, Merikare, he recalled, in regard to
Thinis (ancient seat of power in Egypt):
Lo, a shameful deed
occurred in my time:
The nome of This
was ravaged;
Though it happened through my doing,
I learned it after it was done.
[Emphasis added].
Cf. Genesis 12:17-19:
But the Lord
afflicted Pharaoh and his house with great plagues because of Sarai ....
So Pharaoh called
Abram, and said,
‘What is this you
have done to me?
Why did you not
tell me that she was your wife?
Why did you say,
‘She is my sister’? so that I took her for my wife?
Now then, here is
your wife, take her, and be gone’.
It may now be
possible to propose some (albeit tenuous) links between the era of Khety and
what is considered to be the far earlier Old Kingdom period to which I would
assign Abraham. N. Grimal refers to another Aha (that being the name of
Abraham’s proposed contemporary, Hor-Aha) as living at the same time as Khety
II.
Another tentative
suggestion would be that the legendary Nebka, ruler of Egypt, whom Grimal and
the likes find difficult to locate precisely in early Egyptian history, was
Nebkaure, Nebkare, Pliny’s traditional ruler of Egypt at the time of Abraham –
and Khety Nebkaure according to David Rohl.
This name, in turn,
Nebka, may then allow for a link also to be made with Raneb, whose name we have
found to be like Abimelech.
There may be yet
more to this king, since “Egyptologist Jochem Kahl argues that Weneg was the same person as king Raneb …”: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weneg_(pharaoh)
If Menes Hor-Aha (‘Min’) had really reigned for more
than sixty years (Manetho-Africanus), then he is likely to have accumulated
many other names and titles.
We may need to start investigating First, Second and Tenth Dynasty
inter-connections.
The ancient Egyptians are not renowned for their
sea-faring abilities.
Author-mariner Gavin Menzies might dispute
this.
The Akkadian-Assyrian name for Egypt was “Magan”,
and we learn that: “… the ships from Magan …
[Sargon] made tie-up alongside the quay of Akkad”.
The era of Sargon of Akkad I have
synchronised with the First Dynasty
of Egypt, and N. Grimal tells of “boats” being referred to in the Palermo Stone
in connection with the ruler, Aha.
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