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Exodus
Memories of Southern Sinai
(Linking the
Archaeological Data to the Biblical Narratives)
17 Nov.
2001
19 Jan. 2002
Updated and Revised
15 September
2002 Updated and Revised
13 October
2002 Updated and Revised
The
Problem:
Mainstream
secular humanist scholarship understands that there was no Exodus on the
basis of the analysis of archaeological data. Conservative scholarship has
been understandably dismayed by this turn of events. Has the
archaeological evidence been misunderstood ? Is nothing recoverable,
historically speaking -from archaeology- to explain how Israel
came to develop its traditions of an Exodus ?
Some
scholars have noted that even "myths" frequently have a historical basis
buried deep within their structure, a remembrance of a real event (if only
one can patiently peel away the layers of embellishment that accrued with
the passage of time).
It is my
understanding that the Hebrew Bible has preserved real historical events
in its Exodus narratives. This brief article delves into the muddied
waters of Exodus
research
to identify
the events occurring in "real history" as revealed by archaeology, which
are being preserved in the Exodus narratives.
Dating the
Exodus Narratives-
Secular
humanist scholars have determined that contrary to the traditional
understanding of Moses having written the Pentateuch, internal clues
suggest it is a creation of ca. 562-560 BCE on the basis of 2 Kings 25:27,
which mentions the Babylonian king Evil Merodach, who reigned during the
aforementioned years (allowing that endings in a composition date the
work).
Other clues
from archaeology have caused many scholars to realize the composition is
quite late, no earlier than LATE IRON II TIMES, as noted by
MacDonald.
Burton
MacDonald, a professional scholar and archaeologist makes the following
observations from his many years of experience in surveys of sites in
Transjordan, ancient Edom, Moab and Ammon (emphasis is mine)-
"My
experience in the field of Near Eastern archaeology has led me to the
general conclusion that the biblical stories about Transjordanian places
and events best fit into the Iron II period and later. This conclusion
comes from a general knowledge of the results of current archaeological
work throughout Jordan and specifically from my archaeological survey work
south of Wadi al-Hasa, in the Southern Ghors and Northeast `Arabah, and in
the Tafila-Busayra region (beginning 1999). The findings of the above-listed surveys indicate there are few, if
any, Late Bronze Age materials and a paucity of Iron I Age materials in
the areas being surveyed. On the other hand, the Iron II Age is well
represented in all of these areas. I WAS THUS FORCED TO QUESTION THE
TRADITIONALLY HELD OPINION THAT THE MOSES-LED GROUP, ON ITS WAY FROM EGYPT
TO THE LAND OF CANAAN, PASSED THROUGH/AROUND EDOM (AND MOAB) DURING THE
LATE BRONZE-IRON I PERIODS. On the basis of recent archaeological work, I
concluded that a Moses-led group would have encountered little, if any,
opposition if it had passed through the territories in question during the
periods traditionally associated with this event. However, recent
archaeological evidence indicates that opposition to such a passage would
be understandable during the Iron II period. Thus, the narratives relative
to the Exodus best fit the settlement history of the area during the Iron
II rather than the previous two archaeological periods. Similarly, the narrative of Israel's defeat of Sihon and the
capture of his capital city of Heshbon would fit better the archaeological
history of this site during the Iron II rather than the Late Bronze-Iron I
period. This does not mean that the present writer denies that there are
older traditions behind the biblical narratives. However, THE TEXTS IN QUESTION WERE MOST PROBABLY WRITTEN IN LIGHT
OF THE SETTLEMENT CONDITIONS THAT PREVAILED IN THE IRON II PERIOD AND
PROBABLY TOWARDS THE END OF THAT PERIOD. Thus, the assumption here is that
although the biblical writer may have used material that predates his
time, he set that material into a context, namely, the Iron II AND LATER
PERIODS, that would be meaningful to his readers." (pp.4-5, "Introduction." Burton MacDonald. "East of the Jordan" Territories and Sites of the Hebrew
Scripture.
Boston.
American Schools of Oriental Research. 2000. ISBN 0-89757-031-6)
Dating the
Exodus-
The date of
the Exodus is in dispute. There are many different proposals from
professional and amateur scholars, running the gamut from the end of the
Early Bronze Age to Iron Age I times. One of the problems in dating the
Exodus lies in contradictory statements which appear in the texts. We are
informed that 480 years elapsed from the Exodus to Solomon's 4th year when
he undertook the building of the Temple (1 Kings 6:1). A commonly accepted
date for this event is 966 BCE, when 480 years is added, an Exodus date of
ca. 1446 BCE is arrived at. Unfortunately, this date is contradicted by
the biblical texts. Careful study by several scholars of
chronologies preserved in the books of Judges and Samuel suggest
that more than 480 years elapsed, the estimates varying.
Hoffmeier in
his recent book on the Exodus noted the problems-
"However, as
Jack showed, if all the periods are added together, such as the forty
years in Sinai, the lengths of the Judges, and the periods of peace
between the Judges, plus the length of David's reign, the total is 534
years. On top of this figure, the duration of Joshua's leadership in
Canaan and the length of Saul's kingship, which are not preserved, bring
the total close to 600 years."
(p.125.
James K. Hoffmeier. Israel in
Egypt, The Evidence for the Authenticity of the Exodus
Tradition. New York.
Oxford University Press. 1997)
If one adds
the nearly 600 years to 966 BCE one arrives at an Exodus ca.
1566 BCE. I note that
some Egyptologists understand that Pharaoh Ahmose I was reigning at this
time and he is credited with expelling thousands of Asiatics from the
Eastern Delta, pursuing them to Canaan and making their homeland a part of
the Egyptian Empire.
Redford, a
prominent Egyptologist has argued that the Hyksos expulsion is what is
being remembered in the Hebrew Bible, because it is the only event in the
whole of Egyptian history where large numbers of Asiatics are confirmed as
being defeated and pursued into Canaan on contemporary monuments found in
Egypt. Redford is apparently unaware of the Bible's chronological
association of nearly 600 years plus 966 BCE, as falling in Ahmose I's
reign.
Redford
:
"...no one
can deny that the tradition of Israel's coming out of Egypt was one of
long standing...There is
only one chain of historical events that can accomodate this late
tradition, that is the Hyksos descent and occupation of Egypt...And
in fact it is in the Exodus account that we are confronted with the
Canaanite version of this event..." (Donald
B. Redford, Egypt,
Canaan, and Israel in Ancient Times. Princeton
University Press. 1992)
Assman, an
Egyptologist at Heidelberg University (Germany), remarks about Freud's
understanding that the Exodus is a Hebrew
INVERSION of the
Hyksos Expulsion (Emphasis is mine):
"Freud's
ingenious observation links up perfectly well with the relationship
between the biblical account of the Exodus and what
was to be considered the historical evidence for it. The historical
evidence for a longer sojourn of Syro-Palestinian Semites in Egypt IS THE
HYKSOS OCCUPATION, when the foreign invaders reigned as kings over Egypt, eventually to be expelled by an Egyptian dynasty. These events came by NARRATIVE INVERSION to be shaped into the story of slaves that were able to escape slavery and were elected by God to become a people and even have kings of their own." (p.150. Jan Assmann. Moses the Egyptian, The Memory of Egypt in Western Monotheism. Cambridge, Massachusetts. Harvard University Press. 1997) The
authorities are not in agreement on the dates for Pharaoh Ahmose I who
expelled the Hyksos: Breasted prefers 1580-1557, Gardiner prefers
1575-1550 BCE. There are other dates as well.
The Case
Against an Exodus during Dynasty 19 or 20-
In seeking
an archaeological sitz im
leben for the
Exodus narratives mainstream secular humanist scholarship understands that
the archaeological picture reveals that Israel is settling the land in the
Early Iron I period as described in the book of Judges, and therefore, if
there was any kind of an Exodus, it ought to be dated to the 19th or 20
Egyptian Dynasties. However, Weinstein makes a penetrating observation
about proposals for an Exodus in this time period :
"The only
question that really
matters is whether any (non-biblical) textual or archaeological materials
indicate a major outflow of Asiatics from Egypt to Canaan at any point in
the 19th or even early 20th Dynasty. And so far the answer to that
question is no." (p.93, James Weinstein, "Exodus and Archaeological
Reality," Ernest S. Friedichs & Leonard H. Lesko,
Exodus : The Egyptian Evidence. Winona Lake, Indiana, Eisenbrauns, 1997, ISBN 1-57506-025-6) Unlocking
the Mystery of the Exodus' link up with the Archaeological
Data-
It is my
understanding that the problem in determining a date for the Exodus is
that scholars have failed to realize that the Exodus narratives are a
"conflation and fusing" of various events occurring from the Early
Bronze II through Iron II periods. The Exodus' "Egyptian data" is a
conflation of events which arose in the course of the 18th through 20th
Dynasties. The Exodus account is a Mosaic, a multi-stranded rope whose
threads are from different archaeological eras. I am positing that
events from Iron Age I and II have been transposed chronologically into
the Late Bronze Age I and II. This is not to say that there are no events
from the Late Bronze Age being remembered and that all we have is a false
chronology- there are events from Late Bronze Age times being
remembered and joined to Iron Age happenings.
Linking the
Archaeological Data with the Exodus Narratives-
It is my
understanding that different scholars have correctly identified various
"strands" of the Exodus Mosaic. Doctors John Bimson and Bryant Wood are
correct in my estimation, in noting that the archaeological evidence at
Jericho for the end of the Late Bronze and beginning of the Early Iron as
the sitz im
leben for
the Exodus narratives is seriously flawed. Jericho in this period was not
a flourishing city with mighty walls to fall to Joshua, it was practically
deserted. They do note, however, that MB IIC Jericho best fits the
biblical scenario. This city was torched and its walls were the last ever
built at the site (no Late Bronze or Iron Age city wall ever being
found).
Dr. Gerald
Aardsma has another piece of the puzzle, noting the collapsing walls of
Jericho at the end of the Early Bronze Age as best fitting the story of
Joshua's falling walls. Kitchen and Hoffmeier have correctly identified
still another puzzle piece, the mention of the store city of Ramesses in
the Exodus narratives as a marker in the text for establishing a
sitz im
leben for the
Exodus in the Ramesside era. Whilst Redford and Romer have correctly noted
that the only event in the whole of Egyptian history remotely similar to
the Exodus is the expulsion of the Hyksos under Pharaoh Ahmose I.
MacDonald has correctly identified the "end" of the Late Iron II period
for the sitz im
leben of
the Exodus narratives, Edom being a powerful urbanized state in this
period, capable of blocking 600,000 Israelite warriors wanting to cross
her lands.
All of these
scholars have, in my estimation, correctly identified some of the various
strands appearing in the Exodus narratives. Their collective confusion,
however, was the failure to realize that these strands are evidence of a
fusing or conflation of events from a period of time extending from the
Early Bronze II to Iron II as behind the Exodus narratives.
IT IS
IMPORTANT FOR THE READER OF THIS PAPER TO KEEP IN MIND THAT MY
UNDERSTANDING IS THAT THE EXODUS NARRATIVES ARE A CONFLATION OR FUSION OF
VARIOUS EVENTS EXTENDING FROM EARLY BRONZE II TO IRON II AS HE READS WHAT
FOLLOWS.
Finkelstein
and Silberman seem to "echo" my understanding of the Exodus narratives
being a fusion of events from differing archaeological time
periods-
"So where
does this leave us ? Can we say that the Exodus, the wandering, and -most
important of all- the giving of the Law on Sinai do not possess even a
kernel of truth ? So many
historical and geographical elements from SO MANY PERIODS may have been
embedded in the Exodus story that it is hard to decide on a single unique
period in which something like it might have
occurred.
There is the
timeless rhythm of migrations to Egypt in antquity. There is the specific
incident of the Hyksos domination of the delta in the Middle Bronze
Age. There are the suggestive parallels to elements of the Ramesside
era relating to Egypt -together with the first mention of Israel (in
Canaan, not Egypt)...The Bible may reflect New Kingdom reality, but it
just might as well reflect later conditions in the Iron Age, closer to
when the Exodus narrative was put in writing.
And that is
precisely what the Egyptologist Donald Redford has suggested. The most
evocative and consistent geographical details of the Exodus story come
from the seventh century BCE..." (p.65, "Did the Exodus Happen ?"
Israel Finkelstein & Neil Asher Silberman. The Bible Unearthed, Archaeology's New Vision of Ancient Israel and
the Origin of its Sacred Texts. New York.
The Free Press. 2001. ISBN 0-684-86912-8)
Israel in
Egypt-
Redford has
noted that it is only in the Hyksos period that archaeology has attested
the presence of a large Asiatic populace dwelling pretty much to itself in
the Eastern Delta, as portrayed in the Exodus narratives. He has noted on
the basis of Egyptian documents that although Egypt had large numbers of
Asiatic slaves in New Kingdom times, these slaves were dispersed the
length and breadth of Egypt for service in temple estates and servile work
on monuments.
Redford-
"From the
18th through 20 Dynasty, one notes the total absence in LE 8, 13 or 14 of
any evidence of a substantial resident population of Asiatics living in
large measure unto itself. The documents of the time, both private and
official, are not silent on the subject of the eastern delta, but they
depict for us a tract combed by Medjay and desert patrols- designed
specifically to keep aliens out- dotted with checkpoints and well-sited
forts. The eastern delta is, in fact, a sort of limes to be guarded by
god, priest and soldier; it is not a buffer zone, out of Egypt's effective
control, inhabited by a foreign community speaking another language. Of
the types of sojourn reviewed above, it is clear that whoever wrote the
narrative in Exodus is thinking of the last. The Israelites constitute a
discrete community, largely serviced by their own people, living apart
from the Egyptians in the land of Gsm, on the eastern side of Lower Egypt,
even at times enjoying their own climate ! The picture resembles that of a
canton contiguous to Egypt rather than a dispersed ethnic labor force
within the country." (p.62. Donald B. Redford, "Observations on the
Sojourn of the Bene-Israel." Ernest S. Frerichs & Leonard H. Lesko.
Editors.
Exodus : the
Egyptian Evidence. Winona
Lake, Indiana. Eisenbrauns. 1997. ISBN 1-57506-025-6)
The
"Alleged" absence of "archaeological evidence links" providing a
sitz im
leben for the
Exodus narratives in the Southern Sinai-
A number of
scholars have stated categorically that there is no archaeological
evidence to be found in the Southern Sinai to support the Exodus
narratives. Here are a random selection of such
"Allegations"-
Dever on the
Exodus and Archaeology-
"The only
2nd millenium BCE Sinai route that is attested archaeologically is the
northern route along the coastal dunes -the way of Horus-
which archaeological investigation has indeed illuminated, precisely in
Egyptian New Kingdom times. But this is the route that was bypassed,
according to the biblical tradition, because of Egyptian control. All we
can say is that recent, extensive exploration of the entire Sinai by
Israeli archaeologists, geologists and others has turned up no Middle or
Late Bronze Age presence in the central or southern Sinai whatsoever. Thus
our current, detailed knowledge of this remote and hostile area calls into
question the biblical tradition of some 2 million people wandering there
(Numbers 11:21) for some 40 years (Deuteronomy 2:7). The barren terrain
and sparse oases might have supported a few straggling nomads, but no more
than that." (p.72. William G. Dever, "Is There Any Archaeological Evidence
For The Exodus ?" Ernest S. Frerichs & Leonard H. Lesko. Editors.
Exodus : The
Egyptian Evidence. Winona
Lake, Indiana. Eisenbrauns. 1997. ISBN 1-57506-025-6)
Perevolotsky
and Finkelstein on the absence of archaeological evidence for an Exodus
presence in the Southern Sinai-
"In recent
years archaeological research in the Sinai peninsula has burgeoned as
never before. Intensive surveys and excavations have been carried out in
all regions of the peninsula, and what was once a remote and mysterious
region has become, archaeologically speaking, well known and relatively
understood.
All this
archaeological activity, however, has contributed almost nothing to our
understanding of the Exodus. This is true despite the fact that the Bible
describes the wanderings of the Israelites at great length and even
provides us with a long list of place-names where the children of Israel
encamped during their wanderings (Numbers 33). But, so far, no remains
from the Late Bronze Age (15th-13th centuries BC- the period in which
these events were supposed to have taken place) or even from the
subsequent Iron Age I have been found anywhere in the whole Sinai
peninsula, except for archaeological evidence of Egyptian activity on
Sinai's northern coastal strip. Accordingly, no progress has been made in
locating the Israelite encampments, in identifying their route, or in
fixing the site of Mt. Sinai." (p.28. Aviram Perevolotsky & Israel
Finkelstein, "The Southern Sinai Exodus Route in Ecological Perspective."
Biblical
Archaeology Review.
July-August 1985, Vol. XI, No.4)
Rosen :
"The virtual
absence of remains from the Middle Bronze or Late Bronze Ages in this area
[the Lower Negeb] and the rest of the Negeb contradict the 38 year
Israelite settlement recounted in Exodus. Similar problems attend
virtually all attempts to identify specific sites (especially Mt. Sinai)
in the Central Negeb with places mentioned in Exodus." (p.1064, Vol. 4.
Steven A. Rosen, "Negeb." David Noel Freedman, Editor. The Anchor Bible Dictionary. New York.
Doubleday. 1992. 6 vols. )
Dever
:
"The Sinai
Tradition...All we can say is that recent extensive exploration of the
entire Sinai by Israeli archaeologists, geologists, and others has turned
up virtually no Middle Bronze/Late Bronze presence in the Central or South
Sinai. Our current detailed knowledge of this remote and hostile area
calls into question the biblical tradition of a million-and-a-half or more
people migrating there (Nu 11:21) for some 40 years (De 2:7). The barren
terrain and sparse oasies might have supported a few straggling nomads,
but no more than that." (Vol. 3, p. 547. Willam G. Dever, "Israel,
History of, Archaeology and the Conquest." David Noel Freedman, Editor.
The Anchor
Bible Dictionary. New York.
Doubleday. 1992. 6 vols. )
Romer, a
British Egyptologist, also noted the absence of any evidence in the Sinai
for Moses' Israelites (600,000 warriors, or one and a half million
souls)-
Romer
:
"Hard
evidence of the Exodus event in the preserving deserts of the Sinai, where
most of the biblical wandering takes place, is similarly elusive. Although
its climate has preserved the tiniest traces of ancient bedouin
encampments and the sparse 5000-year-old villages of mine workers, there
is not a single trace of Moses or the Israelites; and they would have been
by far the largest body of ancient people ever to have lived in this great
wilderness." (p.58, "Genesis." John Romer. Testament, The Bible and History. New York. Henry Holt & Co. 1988. ISBN 0-8050-0939-6)
Contra the
above statements by these scholars, I understand that there is
archaeological evidence from the Southern Sinai to link Israel's Exodus
traditions to. Because these scholars apparently do not realize that the
Exodus traditions are drawing traditions from a wide range of time, Early
Bronze II to Iron II, they have, in confusion and bewilderment, overlooked
the link-ups.
We are
informed by the biblical texts that the Exodus took place during the 18th
Dynasty, either ca. 1566 or 1446 BCE. If the bible is correct, that the
Exodus occurred in the Late Bronze Age, then how does one account for the
"missing archaeological evidence" according to above scholars
?
My research
suggests that the scholars are wrong, there is indeed evidence from the
Late Bronze Age, in the Southern Sinai, providing the "missing links" to
the Exodus narratives.
Beno
Rothenberg has written extensively on his surveys and numerous excavations
by himself and others in the Southern
Sinai. He is an
Israeli archaeologist who knows the area like the back of his hand, having
combed this area since the late 1960's. He has over 30 years of first-hand
experience of what exists and doesn't exist -archaeologically speaking- in
the Southern Sinai.
According to
Rothenberg, there is a presence archaeologically speaking of a peoples
"come from Egypt" wandering the wilderness wastes of the Southern Sinai in
the Late Bronze Age. We are informed by the Exodus narratives that Israel
is recently come from Egypt, and that she employs Kenite or Midianite
guides through the Southern Sinai to lead her to the Negev and
Kadesh-Barnea. The biblical texts are somewhat confused as to whether
Moses' father-in-law and guide is a Kenite called Hobab or a Midianite
called variously Jethro or Reuel.
Mainstream
scholarship understands that the Kenites are "smiths" working in metal,
who wander the Sinai. It has been noted that the root qyn in Old South
Arabic, Hebrew, Aramaic and Palmyrean means "a smith." Is there any
evidence in the Southern Sinai of a "peoples come from Egypt" who are
accompanied by native "smiths" ? The answer is yes.
Archaeologists have noted that during the Late Bronze Age the
Egyptians of the New Kingdom period are present, mining for Turquoise and
Copper at several mining camps. Excavations at these camps have revealed
that native Asiatics are present working as miners with the Egyptians.
These miners, I suspect, have become the Kenites in biblical re-telling of
the events. The Egyptian miners have been transformed into Israel,
wandering the Wilderness with Kenite "smiths". The native
metalurgists would be employed by the Egyptians in helping to identify ore
deposits in the Sinai and working them.
I note that
in the biblical narratives, Israel is portrayed as employing metalurgical
skills, for while in the Southern Sinai, she "casts objects" for the
Tabernacle from gold, silver, bronze and copper. I suspect this is an
allusion to the Native metalurgists and Egyptians casting copper objects.
An Egyptian shrine has been found at Serabit el Khadim in the Southern
Sinai. When excavated it revealed that votive objects were donated by not
only Egyptians but also by the Asiatics, because they bore Proto-Sinatic
inscriptions, which have also been found in Canaan. Here then, for me, is
the "link up" of Israel in the Southern Sinai, honoring or worshiping
Egyptian gods in a Late Bronze Age context.
We are told
that Aaron fashioned a Golden Calf and presented it to Israel as its god.
I note that the Egyptian shrine at Serabit el Khadim is dedicated to the
Egyptian goddess, Hathor, who was rendered sometimes as a cow, wearing a
sun-disc between her horns and a menat necklace on the back of her neck.
Such a bas-relief has been found at Serabit el Khadim. According to some
Egyptian myths, Hathor was the goddess of the Sky. These myths portray her
as giving birth
to the Sun-god, Re or Horus, each morning AS A CALF. One of Hathor's epithets was "the golden one", I note a wall mural
from an Egyptian tomb showing her as the heavenly cow or sky-goddess in a
golden color. Considering that the Sun at sunrise sometimes causes the sky
to take on a golden hue, perhaps she is the "Golden One" because she
reflects the Sun's golden glow ? Is the sun
the "Golden Calf"
?
Vischak on
Hathor giving birth to the sun-god :
"Hathor was
described as the mother of Re as well...She gave birth to the sungod and
carried him between her horns...Hathor's role as Re's mode of successful
rebirth each day made her both wife (whom he impregnates with himself) and
mother (who gives birth to him on the eastern horizon)." (Vol.2, p.84,
Deborah Vischak, "Hathor." Donald B. Redford, Editor. The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt. 2001. 3 vols.)
"Hathor...is
often addressed as Nb(t) "the Golden One," a name
whose origins and intent are uncertain." (Vol.2, p.82, Deborah Vischak,
"Hathor." Donald B. Redford, Editor. The Oxford
Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt. 2001. 3
vols.)
Ions on the
sun-god as a "Calf"-
"The sun,
most important of the Egyptian deities, has many names, and the
interpretations given to his functions were extremely varied...He was also
called Horus, and when
this aspect combined with that of Ra as
Ra-Harakhte he was seen
as the youthful sun
of the horizon, a
winged
sun-disk. He was
said to be born every
morning as a Golden
Calf
from the heavenly cow or to swallowed every night by the celestial woman and reborn daily from her..." (P.24, "The Creation of the World." Veronica Ions. Egyptian Mythology. Paul Hamlyn Ltd. Feltham, Middlesex. 1965, 1968) James noted
that the sky as a goddess could give birth to the sun as a "bull-calf"
(noting Nut in this instance as the sky-goddess) -
"It was
Heaven that was regarded as a woman deified as the goddess Nut whom, as
the goddess of the West, the sun enters in his daily course to be reborn
by her each day. He makes his entrance by impregnating her and his coming
is greeted by her as that of 'the Bull of Heaven'- the dominating male and
embodiment of virile fertility. 'O Re, impregnate the body of Nut with the
seed of that spirit that must be in her.' Similarly, Geb, the earth-god,
was called the Bull of the sky-goddess Nut, the sky like the queen-mother
was described at 'the cow who bore the bull,' the rising sun being the calf born of her
each morning." (P.58, "The Goddess in the Nile Valley." E.O. James.
The Cult of
the Mother-Goddess. New York.
Barnes & Noble. [1959] reprint 1994. ISBN 1-56619-600-0)
I suspect
that the Israelites are drawing their imagery of Israel in the wilderness
worshiping a Golden Calf from the Serabit el Khadim Hathor myths. The
Golden One has perhaps become the Golden Calf, the Sun that Hathor gives
birth to every morning.
No images of
"Golden Calf" have been found in the Sinai. The only iconographical image
of a Calf in the Late Bronze Age Sinai that I am aware of, is its
appearance as a sacrifical offering to either Egyptian gods and goddesses
or deceased Egyptians. Hornless
Calf heads appear
amongst the offerings found on several stelae erected by the Egyptians at
the Hathor Temple at Serabit el-Khadem.
The
Decalogue or Ten Commandments
on Stone
Tablets
(The
Archaeological "Historical Kernels" For)
When Moses
descends from Mt. Sinai/Horeb he has in his possession a pair of stone
tablets, engraved by the finger of God. In anger, he smashes the tablets
and they lay strewn upon the ground, he then destroys the Golden Calf. At
the beginning of the 20th century archaeologists found several
Proto-Sinaitic inscribed stone stelae or tablets strewn upon the ground
surface --perhaps these strewn tablets are what constitutes the
"historical kernel" to Moses' throwing the two tables of the Law to
the ground, breaking them ? They were found near several mine
entrances, and are believed to have been inscribed by Asiatic miners from
South Canaan working for/with the Egyptians. Other Proto-Sinaitic
inscriptions appear in the living rock of the mine entrances -- could
these inscriptions, found in "living
rock" be what is
behind the biblical portrayal of Yahweh-Elohim making two tablets of stone
FROM THE MOUNTAIN Moses is on, upon which is engraved the Decalogue
or Ten Commandments ? If these miners were "free" men and not
slaves, as argued by some scholars (cf. Beit-Arieh's arguments), then
their periodic return to Canaan might be the source of the "historical
kernel" of Israel wandering in the Sinai wilderness, casting objects for
the tabernacle, worshipping Egyptian gods, carving out of living rock
inscriptions honoring El, and
leaving some of these stelae/tablets as litter upon the ground
???
Beit-Arieh,
an Israeli archaeologist, with extensive experience with the Sinai,
remarks about Proto-Sinaitic inscriptions found on stones labs "strewn" on
the ground outside mine entrances in the vicinity of Serabit el-Khadim,
which, he argues, is evidence of miners from South Canaan working for the
Egyptians (his article discusses the identity of the Asiatic Miners, and
when they were at the mines):
"Obviously,
if the metallurgical equipment can be dated to the final period of
Egyptian activity at the site (New Kingdom) this is strong evidence to the
same period. It should be remembered that several of
the inscribed slabs found at the beginning of the century were found
strewn on the surface outside the mine shafts, additional evidence that they belong to the final phase of
Egyptian presence at the site." (pp.63-5. Itzhaq Beit-Arieh. "Canaanites
and Egyptians At Serabit el-Khadim." Anson F. Rainey, editor.
Egypt,
Israel Sinai; Archaeological and Historical Relationships In The Biblical
Period. Tel Aviv,
Israel. Tel Aviv University. 1987 [These papers being presented in 1982 at
a conference at Tel Aviv] ISBN 965-224-008-7)
Beit-Arieh (1987), notes that the "earliest" Proto-Sinaitic
inscriptions are not to be found in the Sinai, but in Canaan, in the 19th
century BCE, whereas the Serabit el Khadim inscriptions are of the
16th/15th century BCE.
Beit-Arieh:
"The general
consensus (Albright 1969) is that the Proto-Sinaitic inscriptions were the
work of the same Asiatics that are mentioned in the temple stelae.
The fact
that identical alphabetic symbols were already used in Canaan in the 19th
century BCE not only
points to the specific locale of their origin, but completely eliminates
the possibility (as suggested in the past) that the alphabet was invented
in Southern Sinai (Cross 1967)." (p.65. Itzhaq Beit-Arieh.
"Canaanites and Egyptians At Serabit el-Khadim." Anson F. Rainey, editor.
Egypt,
Israel Sinai; Archaeological and Historical Relationships In The Biblical
Period. Tel Aviv,
Israel. Tel Aviv University. 1987 )
Albright
noted several "burial cairns" in association with Proto-Sinaitic
inscriptions, could these cairns be what is behind the notion of the
"graves" of Israelites slain in the thousands in the Wilderness by God ?
The throwing down of the two tablets containing the Ten Commandments being
echos of the Sinaitic inscriptions found on stone slabs in association
with the graves ?
Albright:
"In 1948 I
had a very easy time proving that the so-called "sleeping shelters" were
the remains of burial cairns (bamot), where a number of funerary
inscriptions were first discovered...since the miners could not procure
sacrifical animals themselves, they had to resort to imploring those who
could obtain the animals to show the miners this last kindness. Animals
available in the wilds of Sinai were picked for this purpose; wild cows,
wild ewes and fatlings (i.e., young male animals which could be fattened).
The
divinities usually invoked were El and his consort Asherah
(apparently
identified with a Nubian Serpent-goddess) as well as the 'Lady' Hathor."
(p.14. William Foxwell Albright. The
Proto-Sinaitic Inscriptions and Their Decipherment. Cambidge. Harvard University Press. 1966)
Albright, in
translating one Proto-Sinaitic inscription, suggests the presence of the
name Heber, who appears as a Kenite (Judges 4:11) :
"O Father
E[l], gra[nt] to (my) companion [re]st beside him ! [Perhaps better, "O
father E[l] gra[nt] to Heber re[st] beside him !
The evidence
of the Egyptian mining camps found at Serabit el-Khadim and Timna
suggests that the Asiatic miners had no problem associating Egyptian gods
with their own in dedicatory inscriptions. For example a Sphinx found at
the Hathor temple at Serabit el-Khadim, and apparently dedicated to
Hathor, although an Egyptian creature, bears a Proto-Sinaitic inscription
calling Hathor, "Baalat", or "Lady" (just as Baal means "LORD").
I would
argue that the memory of Israel worshipping Egyptian gods in the Sinai, is
an echo of memories of South Canaanite miners, honoring Egyptian gods at
Serabit el-Khadim and Timna. These miner's return to South Canaan, and
their stories, were transformed by later generations into the Exodus
story.
Rothenberg
noted the presence of Asiatic miners at Timna in the Ramesside era. He
further noted that the pottery assemblages suggested people from South
Canaan, the Negev and Midian were working the mines with Egyptians.
65% of the pottery found was Canaanite, 10 % was Negebite, and 25% was
Midianite. The large percentage of Canaanite pottery would suggest
that the "historical kernel" of Israel in the Wilderness of the Sinai was
drawing upon events from Timna. The biblical narratives description of a
"penetration" of Canaan from the south via the Negev and Kadesh-Barnea
would then be a garbled echo of the seasonal return from Timna and the
Arabah, by returning South Canaanite miners, who, in the re-telling became
"Israel."
Mumford-
"New Kingdom
expeditions repaired and embellished the Middle Kingdom shrines of Hathor
("Lady of Turquoise") and Sopdu ("Lord of the East") and constructed a
western series of chambers (with Hathor-headed columns and pairs of
stelae) and an
enclosure wall..."
(Vol.3, p.
290, Gregory D. Mumford, "Sinai." Donald B. Redford, Editor.
The Oxford
Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt. 2001. 3
vols.)
As I have
noted earlier, it is my understanding that the Exodus narratives are a
fusion and conflation of events from different eras, and have combined
elements from Dynasties 18-20.
Rothenberg
found another shrine to
Hathor at Timna (formerly
called Wadi Mene`iyeh) and was able to determine that it had been created
at a somewhat later period of time than the Serabit el Khadim shrine
(Serabit being a Middle Kingdom foundation, repaired and in use from the
days of Ahmose I, founder of the 18th Dynasty,; Serabit el Khadim in
Arabic means "Columns of the Slaves"). The Timna shrine upon excavation
revealed votive objects, some of which bore cartouches of Pharaohs Seti I
through Ramesses V (ca. 1318-1156 BCE ). What was most interesting
though was evidence that after the Egyptians had left, the shrine was
purged of its Egyptian elements and re-dedicated as a Tent-shrine,
honoring a bronze serpent, found within the Naos or sacred precinct. The
squared Hathor columns bearing the face of the goddess, had been reused,
Hathor's face being erased along with its Egyptian inscriptions. The column was found upside
down (the head being buried). The pottery found at Timna was a mix
of Egyptian wares from Dyansties 19-20 alongside Negebite handmade ware
and a beautiful painted pottery identified as coming from the northern
Hedjaz and the land of Midian.
Here then,
for me is the Late Bronze/Early Iron I transition period witnessing the
origins of the Exodus narratives. The settling of the Land in Early Iron I
by a "proto-Israel," is hand in glove with the Timna data.
Rothenberg-
"The
Midianites, in using Egyptian architectural elements, effaced the Hathor
representations and any visible hieroglyphic inscription. The central
niches in the Naos was left empty, but in the Naos itself a Midianite
copper snake with a gilded head was found in situ. This was the only
votive object found in the Naos." (Vol.4, p. 1196, Beno Rothenberg,
"Timna." Michael Avi-Yonah and Ephraim Stern, editors. Encyclopedia of Archaeological Excavations in the Holy
Land. Englewood
Cliffs, New Jersey. Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1978, 4 vols.)
It is my
understanding that Ahmose I, who expelled the Hyksos has become Moses,
leading the Israelites to the Promised Land. The Egyptian conquest of
Canaan under Ahmoses and his successors has become Moses' Israelites
conquering Canaan. Is there any evidence from the Late Bronze Age of
Ahmose I's Egyptians in the Southern Sinai at the time of the Bible's
Exodus chronology (recalling that nearly 600 years have elapsed between
the Exodus and Solomon's 4th year, ca. 966 BCE giving an Exodus date of
ca. 1566 BCE in the days of Ahmoses I) ? Yes, there is. According to
Mumford, Ahmose I was responsible for the re-founding of the Hathor shrine
at Serabit el Khadim. What of the presence of Hyksos in the Southern
Sinai- is there any evidence ? Again, yes, there is. According to
archaeologists Hyksos Tell el-Yehudiyeh ware and scarabs have been found
at Serabit el Khadim. If the Exodus narratives are recalling the Hyksos
expulsion of Ahmose I, and claiming they were in Southern Sinai- here's
the archaeological proof everyone is seeking.
Mumford-
"Ahmose
then
initiated the New Kingdom 'empire,' in the northern Sinai and in
Syria-Palestine, and renewed
Egyptian turquoise mining and copper smelting in the southern
Sinai." (Vol.3,
p.289, Gregory D. Mumford, "Sinai." Donald B. Redford.
Editor.
The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt. 3 vols. 2001) "During the
Second Intermediate Period and early 18th dynasty, West Asian (Hyksos ?)
Activity in the southern Sinai may be attested through the presence of
some sherds of Tell el-Yehudiyya ware and some Hyksos-style scarab seals
at Serabit el-Khadim. In
addition, Mughara, Wadi Nasb and Serabit el-Khadim have perhaps 35
undeciphered Proto-Sinatic inscriptions, including one stela that depicts
an Egyptian mummiform deity (Ptah)." (Vol.3, p.289, Mumford.
"Sinai.")
"New Kingdom
activity concentrated at Wadi Nasb and Serabit el-Khadim, in contrast to
Mughara, which yielded one inscription dated to Queen Hatshepsut and
Thuthmose III...Wadi Nasb contained a copper mine...and an inscription of
Ramesses II....The plateau at Serabit el-Khadim yielded twenty turquoise
mines with two inscriptions of Thuthmose IV...The plateau also yielded a
small shrine of Ptah (with three stelae dedicated to Hathor)...New Kingdom
expeditions repaired and embellished the Middle Kingdom shrines of Hathor
("Lady of Turquoise") and Sopdu ("Lord of the East")...Many votives bore
the cartouches of most New Kingdom rulers from Ahmose through Ramesses
VI...From the 19th dynasty to the 20th, expeditions initiated copper
mining and smelting at Wadi Reqeita (in southeastern Sinai) and in the
southern Arabah. The Arabah contained a rock inscription at Timna, from
the time of Ramesses II and one from Ramesses III at site 582, as well as
a Hathor shrine at site 200, which provided votives with the cartouches of
Sety I, Ramesses II, Merneptah, Sety II, Queen Tawosret and Ramesses III,
IV and V. Late in the 20th dynasty (in the time of Ramesses VII to XI) and
in the 21st to 25th dynasty, evidence of Egyptian activity disappeared
from the southern Sinai, and declined in the northern Sinai, which
retained settlement at Retabeh, at some sites in northwestern Sinai, and
at 30 Iron Age sites between Wadi el-Arish and Wadi Ghazzeh." (Vol.3,
p.289-290, Gregory D. Mumford, "Sinai.")
Rothenberg
on Timna-
"Eleven
camps are located in the center of the valley, west of the Timna massif,
several containing substantial slag heaps, testimony to the existence of
intensive mining activities. These remains belong mainly to the 19th and
20th Dynasties of the Egyptian New Kingdom...the Timna mines
of the Late
Bronze Age/Iron I were run by Egyptian pharaonic mining expeditions in
collaboration with the Midianites from across the Red Sea and local
inhabitants of the Arabah and the Negeb. Contrary to the hitherto accepted
identification of the Arabah copper mines with "King Solomon's mines'
(Iron Age II), these New Kingdom mines had no connections with Palestine.
In fact, throughout the period of the Kingdoms of Israel and Judah, with
only a short-lived revival in the time of Shishak I of Egypt (22d
Dynasty), the Arabah mines lay deserted. There is no biblical reference to
any "King Solomon's mines' and no archaeological evidence by people from
Israel or Judah in the mines of the southern Arabah has ever been found."
(Vol.4, p.1475, 1485, Beno Rothenberg, "Timna." Ephraim Stern, Editor.
The New
Encyclopedia of Archaeological Excavations in the Holy
Land. New York.
Simon & Schuster. 1993. 4 vols)
I suspect
that the Exodus narratives of Moses destroying an Egyptian bovine god is
rooted in events at Serabit el Khadim as well as Timna and the Hathor
shrines' Hathor's face being erased at Timna on a re-used column by the
Midianites. The Negebite pottery alongside the Midianite wares lies behind
the Exodus narratives confusion about Moses' father-in-law being either a
Kenite of the Negeb or a Midianite. The remains of a
tent from the
Timna Midianite shrine is what lies behind the Tabernacle of the Exodus
narratives. Canaanite pottery was also found at Timna, providing a link to
Israel and the Hill Country of Iron I.
So, contra
the claim there is no evidence of Israel in the Southern Sinai and Arabah
during Late Bronze and Iron I times, it is my contention that there is- it
is to be found in the Egyptian mining camps of Serabit el Khadim and
Timna. Thus I
understand that the Egyptians AND the Asiatic miners from South
Canaan have been FUSED TOGETHER and have been recast as Israel wandering
in the wilderness with Kenite/Midianite "smiths."
Moses
erected massebah pillars at Mt. Sinai,
symbolizing the 12 tribes of Israel. Rothenberg has noted a row of
Massebah along one
of the sides of the Midianite shrine, which overlies the Hathor sanctuary
at Timna. I suspect these massebah are what lies behind the Exodus
narrative. The bronze snake found in the naos at Timna lies behind the
bronze serpent made by Moses in the wilderness.
Yahweh-Elohim as a "Phallic-god" of Syria, Canaan and
Sinai
It is my
understanding that Yahweh is to some degree absorbing events from the
Serabit el Khadim and Timna Hathor shrines. He is thus to some
degree a miner's God. Excavations of a bamah or high place near the Timna
shrine reveal votive offerings consisting of pottery, beads, rings and
copper figurines. One of these figurines was of a phallic-god. Perhaps
the phallic-Yahweh found at Kuntillet Ajrud (an early 8th century BCE Caravanseri in the Negev) harkens back
to the phallic-god
figurine found at Timna ? An
inscription mentions a Yahweh of Teman at Ajrud, perhaps this is an
allusion to the phallic-god of the Timna area ? The Ajrud phallic-Yahweh
is portrayed somewhat similar to Egyptian Bes iconography, with hands
akimbo on hips. Bes was invoked as a god who had control over serpents.
Moses made a serpent to save Israel from poisionous snakes and a bronze
snake was found at the Midianite tent-shrine at Timna. Perhaps there is a
relationship here of snakes and phallic-gods ?I note that the Canaanite
goddess Athirat, consort of El in the Ugaritic myths is called "She who
treads upon the Sea" and that the sea is associated with a serpent, is she
treading upon a serpent ? A goddess called Qadesh/Qudshu is shown naked
holding serpents in her hands, and with a headdress like Hathor's. Is
there a fusion here of Athirat (Asherah) with Hathor and Serpent goddesses
?
Cross noted
that in the Ugartic myths El is the supreme god, and he called the
"Creator of the gods and of mankind." He has a wife called Athirat
(rendered alternately Asherah by scholars) and evidently other wives. One
poem erotically alludes to his sexual prowess in seducing two women
washing at the seashore. His phallus is noted for its great size, likened
to a "bowstave," which is admired by the two ladies. He succeeds in
seducing hem and they bear him children. (cf. pp.22-24, Frank Moore Cross.
Canaanite
Myth and Hebrew Epic, Essays in the History of the Religion of
Israel. Cambridge,
Massachusetts. Harvard University Press. [1973] 1994. ISBN 0-674-09175-2).
The "phallic
Yahweh" of Samaria found at Kuntillet Ajrud in the Negev (8th
century) and the
"Phallic god" in copper found at Timna (13-12 th century BCE) are probably
relics of the Canaanite "Phallic EL" alluded to in the Ugaritic
myths. Later generations, by the time the Bible was written (ca. 562
BCE), have "cleaned-up" the Lusty Progenitor of the Gods and Mankind via
sexual promiscuity, into a sober, celibate God who has no wives, and whose
"only marriage" is to his people Israel, who are likened to unworthy
lustful harlots.
Cross, in
summing up the Ugaritic texts' portraying El's sexual prowess
:
"El in this
text lives up to the reputation found in Sakkunyaton's lore that he was a
vigorous lusty old man as is fitting for the primordial procreator and
patriarch." (p. 24, Cross)
Rothenberg
notes a Phallic idol found at Timna-
"The votive
offerings found in strata III-II of the shrine can be divided into two
main groups:
1.
Egyptian-made votive offerings, including pottery, stone and alabaster
vessels, faience beads, wands, ring stands, menats, faience bowls, glass,
gold ornaments, faience animal figurines, scarabs and seals and several
Hathor figurines and plaques. There was also a
small sphinx, perhaps representing Ramesses II. 2.
Non-Egyptian, probably
Midianite votive offerings: a cast
copper figure of a phallic
idol, a copper
sheep figurine, numerous rings, amulets, earrings, armlets, and many
copper tools. There were also large numbers of shell beads from the Red
Sea and much beautifully decorated Midianite pottery.
The Pottery
found in the shrine was of the same three types as were found previously
at site
1. Ordinary,
wheelmade pottery dating mainly to the Iron Age I with some Late Bronze
Age sherds.
2. Handmade,
primitive cooking pots and bowls of the Negev type, found previously in
the Central Negev and the Arabah.
3. Bichrome
pottery which did not appear in the first phase of the Hathor sanctuary.
Its decorations included large birds, possibly ostriches, and many
sophisticated geometric designs. This pottery, found in Timna for the
first time in a stratified context and dated absolutely by inscriptions,
is identical with pottery found by Parr-Dayton in Hedjaz (northwest
Arabia) and is therefore called Midianite." (Vol.4, pp.1196-7, Beno
Rothenberg, "Timna." Michael Avi-Yonah & Ephraim Stern,
Editors.
Encyclopedia
of Archaeological Excavations in the Holy Land. Englewood
Cliffs, New Jersey. Prentice-Hall, Inc.1978)
Rothenberg
has pointed out that in order to process the copper charcoal was
necessary. Acaia trees from nearby Sabkhat et-Taba may have been used by
the Timna miners. I note that in order to obtain charcoal one must "bank
the fire" to prevent the wood from uncontrolled burning and turning into
useless ash. I suspect that the imagery of Moses wandering the "West
side of the wilderness and encountering a burning bush," is an echo of the
trees and scrub being burned in the southern Arabah to be employed by the
miners as charcoal. The remark that the tree was not consumed by the
fire, is, I understand, an allusion to the fire being banked, so the wood
is not consumed and being rendered as useless ash.
The Timna
area possessed evidence of Chalcolithic workings in the copper deposits.
In fact the Egyptian Hathor shrine had been built against the side of a
cliff face or outcropping of Har Timna, and over an earlier Chalcolithic
site, suggesting perhaps this was a "holy area" since Late Stone Age
times. If my
suspicions are correct, it is Har
Timna that lies
behind the Mount Horeb episodes. It is close enough to the "western"
border of Midian (in the northern Hedjaz) to qualify as the "Mount of
God."
The Kenites
settled in the Arad area of the Negeb under Joshua. I note that in Early
Bronze II times the inhabitants of the Negeb near Arad penetrated the
Southern Sinai and built seasonal camps there to work the copper deposits.
Several such temporary sites with herd pens and associated grave tumuli
have been found in the vicinity of the traditional Mt. Sinai (Gebel
Musa). I suspect that a "garbling" of traditions exists here, the
Kenites being associated with the Negeb of Arad is alluding to the
Aradites who settled in the Southern Sinai in Early Bronze II. Perhaps
their descendants in Late Bronze Age times came to work alongside the
Egyptian miners of the New Kingdom era, forming the backdrop to the Exodus
narratives ?
Israel's
Encampments, The Archaeological Evidence Of , in the Sinai, Negev and
Arabah :
Israel is
portrayed as having 600,000 warriors and scholars have extrapolated a
population of nearly 2 million souls from these figures. They had in their
possession herds of cattle and flocks of sheep and goats when they left
Egypt. Archaeologists have found numerous seasonal and "overnight"
campsites and settlements from the Neolithic to the Middle Bronze I period
in various parts of the Northern and Southern Sinai, as well as the Negeb
and Arabah. I suspect that a story arose to account for this observed
phenomena- these became the encampments of Israel, lately come from Egypt,
guided by native metalurgists from the Negeb and Midian. The herd pens
became "evidence" they left Egypt with animals. The associated grave
tumuli "became" the graves of the thousands who perished in the wilderness
wanderings for angering their wrathful God.
Archaeologists have noted the absence of Late Bronze Age evidence
in the Negeb (The Exodus being portrayed as occuring in the Late Bronze
Age by the Bible, which gives two conflicting dates, 1540 BCE or 1446 BCE,
the 18th Egyptian Dynasty), but have "marveled" at the "intense"
settlement of this area in the Middle Bronze I by nomadic invaders. These
Middle Bronze I campsites also exist in the Northern Sinai, almost to the
border of Egypt. I suspect that it is these campsites, Chalcolthic,
Early Bronze and Middle Bronze I which came to be identified by Israel in
the Iron II era as the encampments of Israel in the wilderness. I
have argued elsewhere that the Primary History, Genesis-2 Kings was
written ca. 562 BCE in the Exile by one author. I suspect that it was in
the Iron II era (1000- 587 BCE) that these campsites were identified with
Moses' Israelites. The Iron II Israelites naievely assumed that the
hundreds of campsites dotting the Sinai, Negev and Arabah from the
Chalcolthic to Middle Bronze I were those of Moses' Israelites. They did
not possess the "sophisticated" technologies (pottery typologies and
synchronisms developed by Sir William Flinders Petrie and his successors)
available to present day biblical archaeologists to distinguish Late
Bronze Age from Middle Bronze I or Early Bronze II.
The account
of the Christian Pilgrimess, Egeria or Etheria (4th/5th century CE)
reveals that in her day the "circular stone" houses found near Gebel Musa
were understood by her guides to be Moses' Israelite encampments.
Just as the Iron II Israelites could not distinguish an Early Bronze from
a Middle Bronze encampment (the circular stone houses), so too, the Early
Christians were no better, in identifying these as proof of Israel's
presence in the Sinai. These "circular stone houses" dot the landscape of
the Sinai, Negev and Arabah, and they mostly date from the Early Bronze II
and Middle Bronze I.
A European
Pilgrimess called Egeria (4th/5th century CE ?), left an account of her
visit to Mount Sinai (from her remarks it appears that it is todays Jebel
Musa near the monastery of St. Catherines, she noting that Mt. Sinai is 35
Roman miles from Paran/Pharan, identified with Wadi Feiran, which is
approximately, the same distance). She portrays her guides telling
her that Israel while encamped in the valley before Mount Sinai, had built
houses for themselves, and that she was shown by her guides the remains of
their walls, made of stones arranged in circles. Archaeologists have
documented Egeria's words, for they have excavated such circular stone
houses and dated them to the Early Bronze II period. It is anybody's
guess as to how early on, these Early Bronze II seasonal encampments,
created by Asiatic miners from South Canaan and the Negev (Arad and
vicinity) were transformed into the many camps of Israel wandering in the
wilderness. Because these encampments litter the landscape of the Sinai,
thus the reason why Israel was portrayed as existing as 600,000 armed
warriors in the biblical narratives. Probably ALL THE ENCAMPMENTS,
Neolitic, Chalcolithic, Early Bronze and Middle Bronze, became in the
retelling the "thousands" of Israel (the Iron Age II Israelites not being
aware that these encampments "predated" the Late Bronze setting of Israel
in the Sinai).
Egeria on
the valley the Children of Israel settled in at the base of Mt. Sinai and
their "circular
stone houses" (some
scholars have suggested "the Valley" Egeria mentions is Wadi ed-Deir
(Gingas, p. 176, note 65 to p. 56) :
"We took a
route by which we would go down the length of the center of the valley,
which as I mentioned before, is the valley where the Children of Israel
camped while Moses was ascending and descending the mountain of God. As we
proceeded through the valley, the holy men continually pointed out to us
each place. At the very head of the valley, where we had camped and had
seen the bush out of whose fire God spoke to the holy man Moses, we saw
the place where he stood before the bush as God said to him: "Loose the
strap of your shoe, for the place on which you stand is holy ground." And
as we set out from the bush, the guides began to show us all the other
places. They pointed
out first the place where the camp of the Children of Israel stood in the
days when Moses went up the mountain...Then they showed how each and every
one of them had had dwellings, the foundations of which were still visible
today throughout the valley, and how they had been built in a
circular shape, out of stone.
They showed
us the place where the holy man Moses, on his return from the mountain,
ordered the Children of Israel to run from door to door." (p.57. George E.
Gingas [Translator]. Egeria:
Diary of a Pilgrimage. Paramus,
New Jersey. Newman Press. 1970)
Elisha took
refuge in a cave at Mt. Sinai. Perhaps this is an allusion to the caves
made by the miners as they bore into the rock face looking for copper ?
These caves would also be sacred to the God of Miners. Two caves at
Serabit el Khadim were the origins of the Hathor shrine, with additional
rooms being added on in later times by the Pharaohs. So, perhaps Egyptian
and Native miners had a concept of a sacred cave to honor their god in ?
Proto-Sinaitic inscriptions honoring El have been found in association
with caves created by the South Canaanite miners.
While at Mt.
Sinai Moses has a cherubim
throne made for the Ark of the Covenant. Secular scholars have determined from archaeological discoveries
in Canaan and Phoenicia that the cherubim throne is actually a winged
sphinx throne. The origin of the sphinx is Egypt and it was considered a
Solar animal. I note that a sphinx was found at both of the Hathor temples
in Serabit el Khadim and at Timna. Perhaps there is a rememberence here of
the sphinx or cherub being associated with the Egyptian prince, Moses, and
a peoples lately come out of Egypt ? The sphinx at Serabit el Khadim bore
a Proto-Sinatic inscription, l'blt, meaning "the Lady," an epithet of
Hathor in Byblos. So the Semitic miners at the Egyptian mining camp
worshiped a cherub/sphinx.
Budge notes
that one of the forms that Hathor could take was that of a
sphinx-
"Finally,
she is represented as a sphinx...the titles which accompany this last form
call her 'Lady of Hetep,' the Eye of Ra, dweller in his disk, Lady of
Heaven, Mistress of all the gods." (Vol.1, p.430. "Hathor." E.A. Wallis
Budge. The Gods of
the Egyptians. New York.
Dover Publications. [1904] reprint 1969. 2 vols.)
Budge
further noted the sphinx was a solar animal-
"The men who
made the sphinx believed that they were providing a colossal abode for the
spirit of the sun-god which they expected to dwell therein and to protect
their dead; it faced the rising sun, of which it was a mighty symbol."
(Vol.2, p.361. E.A. Wallis Budge. The Gods of
the Egyptians. New York.
Dover Publications. [1904] reprint 1969. 2 vols.)
Some of the
stone stelae at Serabit el Khadim have scenes of Pharaoh, "the living
god", presenting offerings to Hathor as a woman with cow horns and sun
disc on her head. Above them is frequently encountered the winged sun
disc, symbol of Ra, who each morning was born of Hathor, as a
"bull-calf."
No calves
have been found in the Hathor shrines. The only bovine form is that of
Hathor (a bas-relief at Serabit el Khadim shows her as
a c | |