“Between
Stratum G/1 and F there is a definite break between two distinct phases of
settlement. Both Rohl and Bietak believe this line of demarcation between
Stratum G/1 and F at Tel ed-Daba likely marks the break that resulted from the
biblical Exodus of the Israelites from Tell ed-Daba”.
Nugget
This appears to be the true line of
demarcation. Nugget writes:
The
Discoveries at Avaris - Berean Insights
The Discoveries at Avaris
For more than two centuries archaeologists have sought
evidence for the Israelites in Egypt. No Israelite settlement has ever been
found in the 19th Dynasty where the Orthodox Chronology predicted it would be.
I told you in the last Nugget about the Austrian team of archaeologists, led by
Manfred Bietak, who have been excavating at Tel ed-Daba since 1960, more
commonly called Avaris in ancient times. Bietak and his team have made many
astounding discoveries.
Manfred Bietak and his team have found evidence of a
long period of Asiatic settlement in Avaris. Between Stratum G/1 and F there is
a definite break between two distinct phases of settlement. Both Rohl and
Bietak believe this line of demarcation between Stratum G/1 and F at Tel
ed-Daba likely marks the break that resulted from the biblical Exodus of the
Israelites from Tell ed-Daba.
Around Goshen in the Second Intermediate Period there
is incontrovertible evidence for a large Asiatic population. In just the time
frame and place where the New Chronology predicts the Israelite sojourn in
Egypt would be.
The majority of the tombs in the earlier strata are of
Asiatic people from Palestine and Syria. Bietak says the early Asiatics were
heavily Egyptianized. These people have spent considerable time in Egypt and
have taken on many of the cultural practices of the Egyptians themselves. Under
the New Chronology these people have to be Israelites. The fit for the time
period perfectly matches the other indications that this indeed is the correct
time period for the Exodus. These earlier Asiatics are more likely to be
Joseph’s relatives. The later Asiatics were very different and were not
Egyptianized at all and appear to be of Hyksos descent.
In the Brooklyn Papyrus there is a list of 95 names of
slaves, over 50% of which are Semitic names. There are several Biblical names
in the list, e.g. Menahem, Issachar, Asher and Shiphrah. The term Apiru (the
equivalent of Hebrew) appears first in the Brooklyn Papyrus. William Albright
recognized the language belongs to the northwest Semitic language family which
includes Biblical Hebrew. There is a high proportion of female slaves. More
adult women are buried here than men. 65% of all burials are children under the
age of 18 months with girls out numbering boys by a ratio of 3:1. This could be
explained by the massacre of Israelite boys whose bodies were then disposed of
in mass unmarked burial pits.
All over the city of Avaris are shallow burial pits
with multiple victims. There were no careful interments as was required under
Egyptian customs. The bodies were thrown one on top of another in mass graves.
There is no evidence of grave goods being placed with the corpses as was the
Egyptian custom. Bietak is convinced this is direct evidence of a plague or
catastrophe. The large part of the remaining population abandoned their homes
and left en masse. Bietak says the site was then reoccupied after
an unknown interval of time by Asiatics who were not Egyptianised. Hence the
break between stratum G/1 and F. There is a strange anomaly where the Asiatic
folk who inhabited Stratum F lived in poor conditions yet their graves were
richly endowed with precious metals and jewellery .
The sources are unconnected and yet intriguingly
consistent. Putting all the pieces together one can build up a consistent story
which supports the Biblical account. The break in archeological stratum between
G/1 and F marks the intervening years following the exodus of the Hebrew slaves
from Egypt.
The repopulation of Avaris sometime afterward by the
Hyksos people who moved into Egypt matches the beginning of the Second
Intermediate Period of the Egyptian Pharoahs [sic]. They were Asiatic people
from the same region as the Israelites but not Egyptianized as Joseph and his
family had been.
The facts fit the period before the Exodus well. Given
the disruption at the time of plagues and the magnitude of the deaths which
occurred there would have been no time to bury the dead according to Egyptian
customs. The predominance of females, especially among children would have been
a result of the deliberate murder of the male children by the Pharoah. Where
did such poor people (slaves no less) get such riches? Simple: read Ex 11:2
which says, “Tell all the Israelite men and women to ask their Egyptian
neighbours for articles of silver and gold.”

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