
“We had a king in Egypt named Timaeus. For some reason unknown to me, during his reign, God became angry, and suddenly people of ignoble origin, audacious, attacked the country from the eastern lands and easily took it without battles.
Having subdued its rulers, they mercilessly set fire to the cities and destroyed the sanctuaries of the gods. They treated the inhabitants with inhuman cruelty – some they killed, others’ wives and children they took into slavery. Eventually, they made one of their own king, his name was Salitis.
He settled in Memphis (in 1674 BC), imposed tribute on the Upper and Lower Lands and placed armed squads in the most suitable places. He particularly took care of the safety of the eastern lands, anticipating the possibility of an Assyrian invasion of his kingdom.
Finding in the Sethroite Nome to the east of the Bubastite River a conveniently located city, which according to ancient religious lore was called Avaris, he rebuilt it, fortified it with an impregnable wall, and placed a large squad in it, consisting of two hundred forty thousand warriors.
He used to go there in the summer to deliver food and money, and to train the army to be constantly vigilant due to the danger of attacks from neighbors. He reigned for nineteen years and then died.
After him, another one, named Bnon, ruled for forty-four years, then another one – Apachnas – thirty-six years and seven months. Then Apophis – sixty-one years, Ianias – fifty years and one month, and finally Assis – forty-nine years and two months.
These six were their first kings, they constantly waged wars and wanted to completely eradicate the population of Egypt. Their entire tribe was called Hyksos, which means “shepherd-kings”, because “HYK” in the sacred language means “king”, and “SOS” means “shepherd” in vernacular. If you combine them together, you get “HYKSOS”.
In Egyptian: AMU or HEKA-KHASWT – Kings of the lands, kings of foreign lands.
Egypt. Manetho. In the book of Josephus Flavius. Against Apion. Book 1 “(84)
“These aforementioned kings from the so-called Hyksos, as well as their successors, ruled over Egypt for five hundred eleven years. Then, against the Hyksos, the king of Thebes and the kings of other Egyptian lands rebelled and waged a cruel, multi-year war”.
Egypt. Manetho. In the book of Josephus Flavius. Against Apion. Book 1 “(84)…
During the reign of a king named Misphragmuthosis, the Hyksos began to suffer defeats and were driven out of Egypt everywhere, but they consolidated in one place, which had ten thousand arouras in circumference.
This place is called Avaris. The Hyksos surrounded it on all sides with a high powerful wall, in order to reliably protect their property and looted booty. Misphragmuthosis’s son Tuthmosis, at the head of an army of four hundred eighty thousand people, besieged the city and tried to take it by storm.
But then, despairing of success, he abandoned the siege and made an agreement with them, according to which all of them had to leave Egypt and move to wherever they wanted in complete safety for themselves.
And they, under the terms of the agreement, with their families and property numbering no less than two hundred forty thousand, went through the desert to Syria. But, fearing the power of the Assyrians (who then dominated Asia), in a place now called Judea, they founded a city capable of accommodating a great multitude of inhabitants, and named it Jerusalem”.
Egypt. Manetho. In the book of Josephus Flavius. Against Apion. Book 1.
In 1470 BC, a disaster occurred, the Deucalion disaster. After the disaster, the inhabitants of Avaris left, they left Egypt. After the disaster, they built a new city, the city of Jerusalem.
“Truly, this land of Jerusalem was not given to me by my father or mother, it was given to me by the Almighty King… Truly, the king has forever named the lands of Jerusalem after himself. Therefore, he cannot leave these lands.”
Tell el-Amarna Tablets. Letter of Abdi-Hiba to Pharaoh Akhenaten
“So wrote Abdi-Hiba to Akhenaten, Pharaoh Akhenaten: “The Palestinians have begun to leave their homes, fearing the terrible deeds of the nomadic Habiru (Hurrians), and have taken refuge in the mountains.” (Tell el-Amarna Tablets. Letter of Abdi-Hiba to Pharaoh Akhenaten) Thus wrote Abdi-Hiba to Akhenaten, Pharaoh Akhenaten: “The Habiru (Hurrians) are a people of unknown origin, living in Palestine in the 15th century BC. The tablets found in Tell el-Amarna report about the Hurrians.
The governor of the city of Jerusalem reports to the Pharaoh about the military successes of the Hurrians: “The land of the king has passed to the people of Habiru (Hurrians),” writes Abdi-Hiba, the ruler of Jerusalem. Zeimern and Conder tried to identify the Habiru with the Jews by the similarity of names, but this assumption contradicts the generally accepted date of the exodus of the Jews from Egypt, attributed to the end of the 19th dynasty, that is, two centuries later.” (Russia. Brockhaus and Efron. Encyclopedic Dictionary) Habiru (Hurrians) appeared in Palestine after the flood appeared in Palestine. The people of Habiru (Hurrians) captured Jerusalem, the city captured Jerusalem.
P.S “These aforementioned kings of the land of Hurri from the so-called Hyksos… in a place now called Judea, they founded a city capable of accommodating a great multitude of inhabitants, and named it Jerusalem.”
Source: Gayane Karapetyan Հայաստան Armenia Армения
