In 1518 BC Moses arrives in the Palace of Egypt. His stepmother is now Hatshepsut, the daughter of Thutmose I and his wife Amosis. I would say, he is sitting on the right here. He is taught Middle Egyptian Grammar. We are studying the grammar of Alan Gardiner which is online. Moses also studied Akkadian and Sumerian. His mother schooled him well in classical Hebrew. Sumerian grammars are also online. It is the oldest language. After the flood of Noah in 2692 BC many spoke and wrote Sumerian. There are some good Akkadian Grammars online. Von Soden is academic. Caplice is a good starter. The brilliant grammarian Riemschneider was killed years ago in Syria. Bauer is also good. Moses was 12 years old. Hatshepsut was 18 years old because she was born in 1536 BC. Her mother was Amosis. Her husband Thutmosis II was unfaithful to Hatshepsut because she only had daughters. Then he slept with a street woman Iset and Thutmosis III was born. When the little harlot came to the palace, Hatshepsut rejected him and gave all her attention and love to Moses. Her mother Amosis took Thutmosis III under her wing. Because Hatshepsut has the bloodline, she became Pharaoh after her husband's death. She put on a fake beard to look like a man. Maybe the women who want to be ordained as ministers like Hatshepsut should acquire a fake beard? Her plan was that she would become Pharaoh and her successor should be Moses. Because Thutmosis III knew that Moses might be designated as ruler after Hatshepsut, especially now that Amosis had passed away, he married one of Hatshepsut's daughters. He hopes thereby to obtain a back door to the Throne of Hatshepsut. Maybe then he can eliminate Moses. Her mother insisted that Thutmose III be appointed as well. The young Thutmose III was a fresh boy and led soldiers to war. Then in 1490 BC Moses lost his patience and killed an Egyptian works officer. Moses ran to his mother, grabbed the book of Job, the books of Adam and Noah and the Patriarchs, and hurried to Midian. He conducted 16 campaigns to Syria when He could not find him because the route to Syria is either over the Negev to Edom, or along the coast to Gaza. Midian more south is forgotten. So when Moses fled in 1490 BC and the authorities were looking for him, he decided to go find him and bring him in. While Thutmose III was in Gaza, he heard that Hatshepsut had died. She died of skin cancer. They found her mummy and the facial cream contained a poisonous ingredient, say the scholars. The bottle was with her in her sarcophagus. Thutmosis III then jumped on a horse and rushed to Karnak temple to be appointed as successor. Prof Charles Fensham at Stellenbosch told us that he raced for four days. Tired and fed up, he was then crowned to make sure Moses was not Pharaoh. Because there was always the danger that the Medinat Habu priests of the Hatshepsut temple could talk the people into bringing Moses in, he had to get Moses. Ban and burn the Bible then there will be no Christians, is the approach of some countries. They are wrong. Christians are underground in large numbers. The same error of judgment was committed by Thutmose III. He then began to scratch out each kartoesh, name stamp of Hatshepsut. Erasure from history would be his outcome in the future, he thought. Thutmose III was very opinionated and stubborn. There are three roads to Megiddo. One is up the Jordan River. The other is on the coast at Carmel. Just east of Megiddo was a narrow road that opened into the valley. Four of his generals say they must go over Carmel, but Thutmosis says no, we are going up the narrow road. He leads the chorus and that day they win the battle at Megiddo. The story is in Middle Egyptian on Karnak's walls. Today in the Orient Museum in Chicago Thutmosis III's sarcophagus and the mummy are 36 years old according to X-ray plates. The age of his eldest son who died at Midnight. So I understand. When the sun rose, writes his vizier, Thutmose III's ankh was taken up and his son became pharaoh in his place. March 1450 BC. Exactly like biblical chronology it has with 970 BC as the fourth year of Solomon in 1 Kings 6:1-4. To conclude, I suspect that Thutmose III saw the Israelites pass through the Red Sea and his generals said: No. He again fell Megiddo style in front of the choir. And his body was never found. Acknowledgment: the photos are of a wall sketch at the Newberry Estate in Clocolan. As a child I spent two weeks there. Newberry's daughter married an Egyptologist and she did the mural in the billiard room. The house has 22 rooms and was built in 1890 by the British.
This is a holiday hotel. We visited my uncle in the parsonage who had Newberry and Trevor, his alcoholic son as his bosses.
https://historicsa.wordpress.com/2018/02/09/prynnsberg-jewel-of-the-free-state/