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In article <103uhq4$29e2d$3@dont-email.me>,No he wasn't. It was his successor.
The True Doctor <agamemnon@hello.to.NO_SPAM> wrote:On 30/06/2025 12:36, Daniel70 wrote:Well Ramses was unjest to the Jews.On 30/06/2025 1:53 am, The True Doctor wrote:>On 29/06/2025 12:13, Daniel70 wrote:>On 29/06/2025 8:19 am, Your Name wrote:>On 2025-06-28 13:38:24 +0000, Daniel70 said:>On 28/06/2025 12:28 pm, The Doctor wrote:>In article <103n1eb$c3gv$1@dont-email.me>,>
The True Doctor <agamemnon@hello.to.NO_SPAM> wrote:On 27/06/2025 21:56, solar penguin wrote:
<Snip>
>>>And it definitely doesn’t make it biological fact.>
And neither is a Time Lord changing gender during regeneration.
Of course Moses was before Greece.
Bullshit, Binky, Greece was around waaayyyy before Moses was even a
twinkle in his Father's eye!! (Either One!)
Strictly speaking it depends what you mean by "Greece".
>
Modern Greece was established in 1830, when it broke away from the
Ottomans.
Ancient Greece began about 4000 years ago (ie. 2000BC)
Neolithic Greece began about 7000 years ago (i.e.5000BC)
Out of those options, I guess the one that falls closest to my
meaning would be 'Neolithic', but Greece (the dirt/soil/land) MUST
have existed WAAAAYYY before THAT!!
>Moses on the other hand is a myth who never existed anyway.>
Religious nutjobs have proclaimed various dates for his birth, like
1391BC, 1592BC, and 1571BC ... but all after Ancient Greece already
existed.
WHAT?? Moses never existed!! But MY Bible tells me so!! ;-)
>
Just like all the dates of The Old Testament .... Set in Mud!!
Once again I think you will find out that you are totally well and
truly wrong.
>
Moses is known from Egyptian inscriptions which concur with the
Egyptian chronology of Diodorus Siculus which names Moses as a
tyrannical ruler of Egypt, namely Ammosis, who was deposed by
Merneptah, Seti II, and Proteus (Setnakte) according to Diodorus and
Manetho.
IF (and that's a big 'IF') Moses was 'a tyrannical ruler of Egypt' how
is he represented in The Bible as a lowly Sheppard, e.g.
>
Moses is represented in the Bible as a prince of Egypt who was
discovered in the ruses by the daughter of Pharaoh (Ramses II as
described by Herodotus) and adopted by him as his son.
>"Now Moses kept the flock of Jethro his father in law, the priest of>
Midian: and he led the flock to the backside of the desert, and came to
the mountain of God, even to Horeb. 2And the angel of the LORD appeared
unto him in a flame of fire out of the midst of a bush: and he looked,
and, behold, the bush burned with fire, and the bush was not consumed."
This happened after Moses murdered an Egyptian soldier and had to flee
to royal palace. This provides more evidence for Moses being the tyrant
Amenmesse since murdering an Egyptian soldier is a metaphor for Moses
attempting to stage a coup against Ramses II's successor his brother
Merneptah and failing.
>>No. Moses murdering an Egyptian soldier which is what led to his exile
https://www.kingjamesbibleonline.org/Exodus-3-4/
>
So, it might seem, Moses was *NOT* a tyrannical ruler of Egypt but,
instead, a lowly Shepard .... or, even, a lowerly employee of his
Father-in-Law!
and having to tend sheep indicates that he wanted to depose the exiting
government of Egypt and make himself Egypt's sole ruler instead.
>
Assume this to be a vast heard of sheep that roamed of vast swathes of
land that Moses had custody of which was worth a pretty hefty fortune
and more than enough to buy Moses all the weapons and mercenaries he
needed for a coup and even the governorship of Kush (though if I
remember correctly from the Book of Jasher, I think he might have
obtained that by a political marriage).
>
Another example of Moses' tyranny are the plagues he inflicted upon
Egypt and the murder of the Egyptian first born including the son of
Pharaoh. Probably Seti II was in power or co-regent by this time and
Ramasse Siptah was the young boy and heir to the throne that he had killed.
>
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