Amenemhet IV: Difference between revisions

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[[Moses]] ([[Amenehet IV]]) brought God's message to the Pharaoh ([[Neferhotep]]); namely, "let My People (The Israelites) go".  Supported by his biological brother [[Aaron]] and his biological sister [[Miriam]] who were Hebrew slaves, [[Moses]] alias [[Amenemhet IV]] became the God ordained leader and spokesman of the Israelites who had grown in number to 2 million and had been serving the 12th dynasty pharaohs as slaves for around 200 yrs; making mubricks for the inner core of the 12th dynasty pyramids and working the fields.  The pharaoh of the time, [[Neferhotep]] would not listen to [[Moses]] and is brother [[Aaron]].  After a series of ten plagues that were inflicted on Egypt, [[Neferhotep]] let [[Moses]] ([[Amenemhet IV]]) take the Israelities into the desert. When they did not return, he pursued them with his army. The Israelites were able to cross the [[Red Sea]] at the Gulf of Aqaba but [[Neferhotep]] and his army drowned when they tried to follow.
[[Moses]] ([[Amenemhet IV]]) brought God's message to the Pharaoh ([[Neferhotep]]); namely, "'''Let My People (The Israelites) Go'''".  Supported by his biological brother [[Aaron]] and his biological sister [[Miriam]] who were Hebrew slaves, [[Moses]] alias [[Amenemhet IV]] became the God ordained leader and spokesman of the Israelites who had grown in number to 2 million and had been serving the 12th dynasty pharaohs as slaves for around 200 yrs; making mubricks for the inner core of the 12th dynasty pyramids and working the fields.  The pharaoh of the time, [[Neferhotep]] would not listen to [[Moses]] and is brother [[Aaron]].  After a series of ten plagues that were inflicted on Egypt, [[Neferhotep]] let [[Moses]] ([[Amenemhet IV]]) take the Israelities into the desert. When they did not return, he pursued them with his army. The Israelites were able to cross the [[Red Sea]] at the Gulf of Aqaba but [[Neferhotep]] and his army drowned when they tried to follow.


Not only did Egypt lose its slave labour force, it lost it's monarch, it's entire army and it's transportation system. It was a massive defeat and not something that Egyptian historians would want to memorialize.
Not only did Egypt lose its slave labour force, it lost it's monarch, it's entire army and it's transportation system. It was a massive defeat and not something that Egyptian historians would want to memorialize.
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