Semites or Hebrews were working at the
Sinai Copper Mines after Joseph died Evidence
---Joseph died in 1878 BC. ---Senuseret III, great-grandson of the friend
Pharaoh of Joseph (Senuseret I, the 14 year old boy that made him Prime Minister),
had vague recollections of Joseph. ---Scholars are postulating that he ruled
until 1850. ---Others are wondering of 1843 BC as the
Oxford Encyclopedia of Egyptology indicated. ---Uncertain as to the ending date is
better. ---What is certain is the biblical date of
1848 BC as the starting date of the Oppression. ---Here is an article in 2022 by a Yale
graduate Phd that the Sinaitic Inscriptions of workers in the mines indicate
that Semites were working there with Egyptians since Senuseret III. ---Sesostris III or Senuseret III was
setting the stage for the Oppression to start in 1848 BC. ---He may or may not have known Joseph
already when he became pharaoh in 1871 if Joseph died in 1878 BC. ---The article deals also with following
Pharaohs down into the Oppression period of 400 years that the Bible is
recording. Amenemhet III and Amenemhet IV. ---It is coppermine workers and
inscriptions that were analyzed by this scholar. ---Around 1916-1919 many scholars were
intrigued by these Sinaitic Inscriptions and of a Sphinx object that was found
with the name of Senuseret III on it. It was not clear but this article
establishes that it is indeed Senuseret III. Reasons are very convincing albeit
that absolute certainty is reserved because of vagueness of letters.. ---What we are trying to do here, is to be
scientific on the matter of the Umwelt history of Joseph and correctly so. ---For me this is a necessary article to
link towards my own assessment so far to the chronology of Joseph and the
pharaohs involved in his life. Source of 2022 investigation and evidence
supporting https://www.academia.edu/96844295/THE_PROTO_SINAITIC_INSCRIPTIONS_AT_SERABIT_EL_KHADIM_IN_THEIR_ARCHAEOLOGICAL_CONTEXT_DATE_AND_FUNCTION Also see the article by A. H. Sayce, The
Origin of the Semitic Alphabet. . http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0035869X00148178 the Cambridge Core terms of use, available
at http:/www.cambridge.org/core/terms. Downloaded from
http:/www.cambridge.org/core. New York University Libraries, on 18 Dec 2016 at
04:35:2