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The actual historical basis for Exodus is a bunch of diseased warlords with leprosy from the Levant who invaded Egypt during the Armana Period, desecrated temples, and were eventually expelled from Egypt for their crimes. They were so embarrassed about their expulsion that they rewrote history to make it look like they they were “oppressed slaves” (Egypt didn’t even have the type of chattel slavery depicted in Exodus) who made a triumphant escape rather than what they really were, expelled invaders with leprosy.
>Osarseph /ˈoʊzərˌsɛf/ or Osarsiph /ˈoʊzərˌsJf/ (Koinē Greek: Ὀσαρσίφ) is a legendary figure of Ancient Egypt who has been equated with Moses. His story was recounted by the Ptolemaic Egyptian historian Manetho in his Aegyptiaca (first half of the 3rd century BC); Manetho's work is lost, but the 1st century AD Jewish historian Josephus quotes extensively from it.
>The story depicts Osarseph as a renegade Egyptian priest who leads an army of lepers and other unclean people against a pharaoh named Amenophis. The pharaoh is driven out of the country and the leper-army, in alliance with the Hyksos (whose story is also told by Manetho) ravage Egypt, committing many sacrileges against the gods, before Amenophis returns and expels them. Towards the end of the story Osarseph changes his name to Moses.[1]
They cry out in pain as they strike you.
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