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Egypt, the Trunk of the Tree, Vol. II
Simson Najovits
其他書名
A Modern Survey of and Ancient Land
出版
Algora Publishing
, 2003
主題
Business & Economics / Economic Conditions
History / Africa / General
History / Ancient / Egypt
History / Middle East / Egypt
BODY, MIND & SPIRIT / Spirituality / Paganism & Neo-Paganism
Political Science / General
Political Science / World / Middle Eastern
RELIGION / Comparative Religion
Social Science / Sociology / General
Religion / Paganism & Neo-Paganism
ISBN
0875862012
9780875862019
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=UVaQJIpx_9wC&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
Synchronized Chronology resolves the structural problems of Egyptian chronology and then outlines the correct history of the Middle East and Mediterranean from the time of Abraham and his wandering into the Empire of Alexander the Great. Recognizing some overlapping of dates and names in Manetho's List of Kings, frees history to place pharaohs and dynasties where archaeology supports their existence. This resolves a myriad of discrepancies and unlikely assumptions that historians have been forced to swallow, and neatly opens the way to synchronizing Egyptian dynasties with Biblical chronology. Several works have appeared in recent years, challenging Egyptian chronology; none is really successful in fixing the multi-layered problems of Biblical chronology, because they try to compress Egyptian history without recognizing duplicated dynasties. The crisis in Biblical history is reflected in The Bible Unearthed. Palestinian archaeologist William Dever has just published What Did the Biblical Writers Know, and When Did They Know It? Peter James received wide attention for his Centuries of Darkness; David Rohl, in Pharaohs and Kings, relies on the recent archaeological work of Beitak at Tel Dab'a in Egypt. The evidence is compelling that the site's population before the Hyksos took over was none other than the Hebrews. Rohl's work, on the period preceding the Exodus, is complementary to The Synchronized Chronology. Like James, however, he tries to squeeze the remaining Egyptian dynasties without discarding the duplicates. It doesn't work. Anyone who enjoys ancient history, archaeology or a good mystery will find this an intriguing read. The controversial theory is well-researched and sure to generate debate.