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   » Wiki: Biblical Egypt
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Biblical Egypt (; Mīṣrāyīm), or , is a term used by historians and scholars to differentiate between as it is portrayed in Judeo-Christian texts and what is known about the region based on archaeological evidence. Along with Canaan, Egypt is one of the most commonly mentioned locations in the Bible, and its people, the Egyptians (or Mitsri), play important roles in the story of the . Although interaction between Egypt and nearby Semitic-speaking peoples is attested in archaeological sources, they do not otherwise corroborate the biblical account.

The Book of Genesis and Book of Exodus describe a period of slavery in Egypt, from their settlement in the Land of Goshen until their escape and the journey through the wilderness to .James Weinstein, "Exodus and the Archaeological Reality", in Exodus: The Egyptian Evidence, ed. Ernest S. Frerichs and Leonard H. Lesko (Eisenbrauns, 1997), p.87 Based on the internal chronology of the Hebrew Bible, this would correspond roughly to the New Kingdom of Egypt during the Late Bronze Age.

In the Bible, a number of Jews took refuge in Egypt after the destruction of the Kingdom of Judah in 597 BC, and the subsequent assassination of the Jewish governor, (2 Kings , Book of Jeremiah ). On hearing of the appointment, the Jewish population fled to , , and in other countries returned to Judah (). In Egypt, they settled in , , , and ().


Portrayal

In the Book of Genesis
In the Book of Genesis, and , along with their nephew Lot, were living in when a famine struck the area and so, the group travels to Egypt, where the Pharaoh, betaken by Sarah's beauty, made her his concubine, unaware that she is married because Abraham introduces himself as her brother, not her husband. Pharaoh gives number of gifts to Abraham in exchange for Sarah, in the form of livestock and slaves, one of whom is , who would later become Abraham's concubine and the mother of his firstborn son, . For how long Sarah lives in Pharaoh's palace is not clear, though it is known that the strikes Pharaoh and members of his household, save for Sarah, with plague, and Pharaoh deduces that Sarah is somehow the cause. Once learning that Sarah is Abraham's wife, not only his sister, he releases her to him and does not ask that Abraham return to him any of the livestock or slaves, and they leave Egypt without interruption, with significant wealth. Later in the Book of Genesis is the story of Abraham and Sarah's great-grandson, , the eleventh son of and his first son with his second wife, . It is said that Jacob prefers Joseph over all of his other sons, causing tension between Joseph and his brothers, and so, they sell him into slavery, to a group of traveling headed for Egypt, where he's purchased by Potiphar, the captain of the guard. Joseph does well as a member of Potiphar's household, highly respected by his master, until Potipher's wife, scorned by Joseph, falsely accuses him of attempting to rape her and Joseph is imprisoned as a result. During his imprisonment, Joseph successfully interprets the dreams of two fellow prisoners, both servants of Pharaoh, one of whom is sentenced to death and the other who returns to Pharaoh's graces. Joseph begs of Pharaoh's cup-bearer, the prisoner who returns to Pharaoh's graces, to tell Pharaoh of him but he doesn't for some time, not until Pharaoh is troubled by dreams as the cup-bearer once was. Joseph reveals to Pharaoh that his dreams are signs of a great famine to come, and for his service, Pharaoh makes Joseph the vizier of Egypt and gives to him an Egyptian wife, . When famine strikes much of the region, not only Egypt, the Egyptians are so well prepared for it that they have a of grain, which foreigners come to buy, among them, Joseph's brothers, who do not recognize him. Later, Joseph calls for all of Jacob's household, numbering seventy individuals, to come and live in Egypt with him, in the land of Goshen.


In the Book of Exodus
In the Book of Exodus, the , descendants of Joseph and his brothers, are still living in the land of Goshen, and are now slaves, beaten, raped, and overworked by the Egyptian overlords under the reign of a new, tyrannical pharaoh. A great-great-grandson of Joseph's brother , , is born in a time when Pharaoh has decreed all newborn Hebrew males be slain and he is saved from Pharaoh's orders by Pharaoh's daughter, who rescues him from the Nile River and raises him as her own son. For a time, Moses leaves Egypt, to escape punishment in the death of an Egyptian man who had beaten an Israelite man, and goes into Midian, and makes a new life there, but returns to Egypt to free his brethren, chosen by the to do so. There, with his brother, , and sister, , Moses demands the release of his people but Pharaoh refuses and for his stubbornness, he and his people suffer the Plagues of Egypt, famine, insect swarms, and notably, the deaths of all the firstborn Egyptians. Pharaoh is ultimately defeated by the and the Israelites, along with liberated slaves of other nations kept by Pharaoh, cross the Red Sea, to go into the .


In the Books of Kings
In the Books of Kings, , the king of Israel and the son of , is said to have married Pharaoh's daughter, whose name is not provided, and received the city of as part of her . Nothing else is written as to the personal nature of Pharaoh's daughter or about her relationship with Solomon. However, their relationship, and Solomon's willingness to take wives from other nations, in violation of laws against intermarriage in the Book of Deuteronomy, is thought to have contributed to his downfall. Solomon is said to have obliged his foreign wives and built temples for their gods in the land of Israel, and after his death at age sixty, relatively young for a biblical character, the tribes of Israel would not accept his heir, , son of the Ammonite woman Naamah, as ruler and so, the united monarchy of Israel failed. Also in the Books of Kings is the story of , a former servant of Solomon who later conspired against him and, when his plotting was revealed, fled to Egypt, where Pharaoh Shishak protected him until Solomon's death. Though he is not identified in the Hebrew Bible, in the , Jeroboam is said to have married a close female relative of Shishak, named Ano, who was the older sister of .


In the Books of Chronicles
In the Books of Chronicles, , son of Solomon and the first king of Judah, is attacked in the fifth year of his reign by an Egyptian pharaoh, whose personal name is given as , whom some historians have identified with . It written that Rehoboam may have expected an attack, as he fortified fifteen major cities, among them and , but his efforts were not enough, as Shishak came with 1,200 chariots and 60,000 soldiers, not only Egyptians but also , , and . As a result of his defeat, Judah became a , subordinate to Egypt. Shishak's invasion of Judah is portrayed as the wrath of the , for the Israelites had forsaken the and so, the left them to the hands of Shishak. The Israelites humble themselves and the prevents further destruction of their people but still orders that the Israelites become servants of Shishak.


In the Gospel of Matthew
In the Gospel of Matthew, part of the , it is said in - that Joseph, the earthly father of Jesus of Nazareth, is visited by an angel in a dream, who tells him to take Mary and Jesus and go to Egypt, to avoid Jesus being slain by King Herod I, called the Flight into Egypt. After Herod's death, they return to .


Historical reality
According to Shaye J. D. Cohen, "Most Israelites were actually of Canaanite stock; their ancestors did not participate in an Exodus from Egypt; Israelites did not build the pyramids!!!". Indeed, the Bible never claims that the Israelites built the pyramids, nor are the pyramids mentioned in it.
(2025). 9781783590100, InterVarsity Press.

According to :


Notable Egyptians in the Bible
  • , the wife of Joseph
  • Bithiah, the adoptive mother of
  • The Egyptian, a Jewish eschatological prophet
  • , the second wife of , former servant to , and mother of
  • Pharaoh's daughter, a wife of
  • , the master of Joseph
  • Potiphar's wife, named Zulaikha in extrabiblical sources
  • , the father of , the wife of Joseph and mother of Manasseh and
  • , a pharaoh of Egypt


See also
  • History of the Jews in Egypt
  • Joseph (Genesis)
  • Pharaohs in the Bible
  • Plagues of Egypt
  • Babylonian captivity


Further reading
  • (2025). 9780199881482, Oxford University Press.
  • (2025). 9783319047683, Springer.
  • Joseph Modrzejewski, The Jews of Egypt: From Rameses II to Emperor Hadrian, Jewish Publication Society, 1995
  • Franz V. Greifenhagen, Egypt on the Pentateuch's Ideological Map: Constructing Biblical Israel's Identity, Bloomsbury Publishing, 2003
  • S. C. Russell, Images of Egypt in Early Biblical Literature: Cisjordan-Israelite, Transjordan-Israelite, and Judahite Portrayals, New York University. Hebrew and Judaic Studies, ProQuest, 2008

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