Sabba – Slightly off topic but not entirely. And I love archaeology.
The New Kingdom is the era between 1550 and 1070 B.C. It started with the accession to the throne of Egypt of Ahmose I (18th Dynasty), the king who rid Egypt of its Hyksos occupiers, re-unified Egypt, engaged in many military campaigns, subdued Canaan…
The New Kingdom was a great age of prosperity in all fields, a time where Egypt was re-born, the age which gave us Queen Hatshepsut, and kings such as Thutmose III, Amenhotep IV (aka Akhenaton) and his beautiful wife Queen Nefertiti, Tutankhamun, Seti I, Ramses II etc. etc. etc.
What have the jews given to Mankind at that time?? What is their contribution to Humanity during, before and after that time? Where are their historical and archaeological records?……
such a question
jews gave, still give mankind hate, lies, genocides, plagiarism, other thefts, misery, degraded art, degrading of cultures.
Sabba you might like this then – probably know about it already;
http://news.discovery.com/history/archaeology/early-image-of-jesus-found-in-egyptian-tomb-140430.htm
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xILJ4GivqpM
Strange that, no mention of the great tribe in any Egyptian tombs?
Yes Mike, I had seen that before ^__^
But thank you for sharing this, for those who haven’t yet.
Amazing Sabba! I am positive that the Egyptian government keeps many things hidden to be very honest. They guard their antiquities which is, at this point in our history, a good idea considering the destructive forces in their midst. You have touched on the rewriting of history over time by various parties ~ the destruction of historical artifacts that do not back up the lies and myths packaged as the “masters of the universe” teach.
When I was young, my idea of a romantic afternoon was a lunch date at the Royal Ontario Museum in the Egyptian room. There was an entire huge wall pilfered from Hatshepsut’s tomb and one could sit and stare at it for hours, a great way to spend time when snowbound for a few hours waiting for the streets to be cleared. Those old-fashioned rooms are gone now, replaced by snazzy stuff about mummies and interactive cartoony play games to keep the kiddies happy. But I digress.
As I read this my instinct goes with the idea that these were the tombs of local officials of some wealth but not aristocracy. Local magistrates, political types, merchants of note. These tombs are not in an area safe for preservation and, in a society for which planning for the next life was of such integral importance, they had this burial thing down to a fine art. As with funeral services today, you get what you are willing to spend or can afford, and they spent everything they could to ensure the gods were satisfied with their gifts and that their final resting places were well equipped. It was commensurate with station.
Be good to see the artifacts some time…. but we might have to wait a little.
Oooh I even found images of that wall. I spent hours trying to figure this wall out. The artistry is amazing.
https://prod01-cdn04.cdn.firstlook.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/3/2016/02/Queen_Hatshepsuts_expedition_to_Punt_plaster_cast_of_her_mortuary_temple_at_Deir_el-Bahri_Western_Thebes_Egypt_-_Royal_Ontario_Museum_-_DSC09766.jpg
https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/736x/4a/ef/b5/4aefb5f75562fc89233ec25aa2ae3ef9.jpg