From the Exodus to King AkhnatonParadigma Ltd, 2009 - 364 Seiten This is the first volume of the series Ages in Chaos, in which Immanuel Velikovsky undertakes a reconstruction of the history of antiquity. With utmost precision and the exciting style of a presentation that's typical for him he shows, beyond doubt, what nobody would consider possible: in the conventional history of Egypt - and therefore also of many neighboring cultures - a span of 600 years is described, which has never happened! This assertion is as unbelievable and outrageous as the assertions in Worlds in Collision or Earth in Upheaval. But Velikovsky takes us on a detailed and highly interesting journey through the - corrected - history and makes us a witness to how many question marks disappear, doubts vanish and corresponding facts from the entire Near East furnish a picture of overall conformity and correctness. You will meet an Egyptian eyewitness of the biblical plagues and the mysterious Queen of Sheba. You will find out to where her legendary visit led her. You will, moreover, learn surprising details about the temple of Solomon and learn who was behind its sacking. In the end you do not only wonder how conventional historiography has come into existence, but why it is still taught and published. Just as Velikovsky became the father of "neo-catastrophism" by Worlds in Collision, he became the father of "new chronology" by Ages in Chaos. |
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... of Samaria ........................................................ 286 Naaman Sar of Syria ..................................................................... 288 1 The name “Hyksos” as “rulers of foreign countries” is 5.
... Syria, gives promise of revealing facts of unmeasured significance. For this reason, too, I should delay no longer the present publication. Is it not the case that at first a new idea is regarded as not true, and later, when accepted ...
... Syria and there built Jerusalem.2 Josephus Flavius, the Jewish historian of the first century, polemized against Apion, the grammarian, and against Manetho, his source, but accepted and supported the view that. 1 T. E. Peet: Egypt and ...
... Syria (New York, 1931), p. 128. 5 H. R. Hall: »Israel and the Surrounding Nations«, in The People and the Book, ed. A. S. Peake (Oxford, 1925), p. 3; Sir E. A. W. Budge: Egypt (New York, 1925), p. 110; A. H. Gardiner, in Etudes ...
... Syria and Egypt, continually involved the wanderers in minor skirmishes, night raids, and irregular engagements. Suffering from lack of water. 1 Midrash Aba Gorion, III (Vilna, 1886), 27. See Ginzberg: Legends, VI, 23. 1 Ibid., III, 62 ...
Inhalt
The Queen of Sheba | 115 |
The Temple in Jerusalem | 153 |
Ras Shamra | 191 |
The ElAmarna Letters | 231 |
The ElAmarna Letters Continued | 267 |
The ElAmarna Letters Concluded | 305 |
Index | 341 |
Bibliography | 353 |