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ANCIENT MYSTERIES :. |
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Posted April 27.03
A short extract from the book 'Solomon, Falcon of Sheba'
[US ISBN 1931882126], which explains the recent discovery of the
tombs of King David, King Solomon, Hiram Abif (Herum Atif) and the Queen of Sheba in Egypt.
One of the primary problems for Judaeo-Christian theologians is the
disturbing reality that both King David and King Solomon, the most
celebrated kings of Judaic history, cannot be found in the historical
record. So how can this be so? How could a wealthy and influential
empire suddenly disappear from the archaeological record? The physical
evidence, or rather the lack of it, has long been deeply troubling.
But, having at last discovered solid evidence that showed the true
location for the tombs and sarcophagi of King Solomon and King David, I
did wonder how these precious artifacts had not been identified
previously. It was only on visiting this location that the reasons
became more clear. While I had already ascertained that these two
historic sarcophagi had lain, misidentified, in a museum for more than
sixty years, I was still not prepared for what I actually discovered –
at the back of a small, unexceptional room, the magnificent solid
silver coffins of two of the most celebrated monarchs in ancient
history lay in total darkness!
This investigation had begun several years ago with the publication
of my first book Jesus, Last of the Pharaohs, in which I traced the
history of the early biblical patriarchs and showed them to have been
the Hyksos pharaohs of Egypt. If the truth were known, the biblical
Exodus of ‘lowly’ shepherds out of Egypt was actually the historical
exodus of the Hyksos Shepherd Kings out of Egypt. This book was
followed swiftly by a sequel called Tempest & Exodus, which showed
clear evidence that the biblical Exodus had been inscribed upon an
ancient Egyptian stele of Ahmose I.
But what of the later and more famous Judaic monarchs from the United
Monarchy of Israel? What of King David and King Solomon? While these
monarchs were undoubtedly missing from the archaeological record of
Judaea, could they too have had an Egyptian ancestry and heritage? This
suggestion might initially seem to be highly unlikely, as it is obvious
that nothing in the biblical history of the United Monarchy can be
directly compared to the chronologically equivalent pharaohs within the
21st and 22nd dynasties of Egypt. But perhaps the real problem here, is
that this accepted axiom is so obvious that nobody has actually tried
comparing these two dynasties, and upon making an initial comparison I
was surprised to find a great number of similarities between the
‘separate’ 10th century BC monarchies of Israel and Egypt. For
instance, the following table lists the known pharaohs of the
twenty-first dynasty and compares these names with the equivalent
biblical ancestors of King David:
Biblical leaders Historical pharaohs
Ezron (Hezron) Ramesses
Ram Ramesses
Amminadab Amen-Nesbanebdjed (Smendes)
Nahshon Nemneshu (Amenemnishu)
Salmon Siamun
Boaz Bas-Uasorkon
Obed Amenemopet
Jesse Harsiese
David Psusennes II
Some of the entries in the above list can be seen to be direct
equivalents of each other, while some of the other names look less
convincing. For the latter entries, perhaps some extra explanations are
required, and these are listed below. The top line in each case
represents the biblical pronunciation (B), while the lower line is the
historical equivalent (H):
B Ez- -ron,
H Esses- -ram (Ramesses X),
B Ram,
H Ram- -esses (Ramesses XI),
B Ammin- -nad -dab,
H Amen- -Nes -ba -neb -djed,
B ... Nah- -shon,
H Amenem -Ne -shu,
B S- -almon,
H Si- -amun,
B B- -Oaz,
H Bas- -Uas- -orkon,
B ... Obed,
H Amenem- -Opet,
B Je- -sse,
H Har- -siese,
B David,
H Psusennes.
This list clearly demonstrates that there are some equivalent names in
both the historical chronology of Egypt and the biblical chronology of
the United Monarchy – indeed the two royal lines appear to mimic each
other remarkably well. But there is a problem with this suggestion,
because the pharaonic king-list ends up with a pharaoh called
Psusennes, whereas the biblical chronology results in King David. On
the surface, there would appear to be no comparison to be made between
these two monarchs whatsoever.
The method of making progress in this research is not simply to
compare names, but to look at these characters’ attributes as well.
There are two main claims to fame for King David: phrases and imagery
that have come down to us through the centuries and the millennia, and
which are probably as familiar to us now as they were nearly three
thousand years ago during the reign of this famous king – the ‘Star of
David’ and the ‘City of David’. Having highlighted these two, unique
terms, the primary goal of this investigation would seem to be
self-explanatory: if a member of the Egyptian royal family can be found
who is strongly associated with both a star and a city, we may well be
a long way down the road to resolving the identity of the historical
King David.
As it happens, there was an Egyptian pharaoh of the twenty-first
dynasty whose name in the hieroglyphic spelling encompassed both the
star * and the city * glyphs, and he was called Pa-seba-kha-en-nuit.
The initial similarity between these two monarchs is, therefore, quite
striking, and so the possibility exists that these monarchs may have
been either related to each other or, more provocatively, the same
individual. Having discovered this synchronism, it was even more
interesting to find that the common Greek name for this particular
pharaoh was Psusennes – the very same pharaoh who appears in the
Egyptian king-list next to the biblical King David. It would appear
that these two monarchs not only had similar attributes, but they also
reigned at exactly the same time, according to the standard chronology.
Since true vowels are not written in Hebrew text, they have to be
inserted between these consonants to produce a name like DaVaD or
DaUaD. But if the true pronunciation of this name is unknown then this
insertion of vowels is largely based upon guesswork, and if the initial
vowel were deleted in this particular case, then the resulting name for
King David would be either DVaD or DUaD. Rectifying this error in
pronunciation would mean that the real Hebrew name for King David was
actually Duad, whereas the Egyptian word for this star was pronounced
djuat. But since the ‘t’ and ‘d’ consonants are almost interchangeable
within the Egyptian alphabet, the words djuat and djuad could be
considered to be direct equivalents of each other. Only now can the
truth of the matter be clearly seen, the Judaean King known as David
[Duad] was most probably the Egyptian pharaoh called Psusennes
(Pa-djuat-kha-en-nuit).
Sheba
Since this suggestion represents such a fundamental revision to both
theology and history, such a list of similarities and coincidences is
simply not enough evidence to convince the sceptical reader. Luckily
for the theory, however, this scenario is further confirmed by the name
of a daughter of this same pharaoh, who was known as Maakhare
Mu-Tamhat. Surprising as it may seem, King David had a daughter who
bore a strikingly similar name; she was called Maakhah Tamar rmt hkem.
The only appreciable difference between the names of these two royal
princesses is that the Judaean lady has dropped the ‘Mu’ from her
second name – in the Hebrew texts, the Egyptian name Maakhare Mu-Tamhat
has become Maakhare Tamhat, or Maakhah Tamar.
Contrary to the popular perception, here, at last, we can see some of
the many conclusive and dramatic links and similarities that really do
exist between the supposedly distinct and separate monarchies of Egypt
and Israel during the 10th century BC. Throughout this investigation,
name after name, title after title and event after event, drawn from
these two dynasties, will be shown to be direct equivalents of each
other. If the truth were known and its implications understood, the
Israelite United Monarchy and the Egyptian 21st dynasty were one and
the same. Israelite history is, in fact, the history of the Lower
Egyptian pharaonic line.
Queen of Sheba
It is at this point that the story diverges for a while, and the next
task is to trace the origins of the legendary Queen of Sheba. So where
did this famous queen really come from? Theologians will point towards
Ethiopia, while historians will instead indicate that she came from
Saba, an ancient city-state that was situated in modern-day Yemen. It
transpires that both of these locations are wrong, and it was the first
century historian Josephus who had a much better grasp of the history
of this era, when he stated that the Queen of Sheba came instead from
Egypt. This fact was actually noted in the biblical texts, but the
scribes were being typically obtuse in not actually naming this famous
(Egyptian) queen in this particular verse:
And Solomon made a marriage alliance with Pharaoh king of Egypt, and
took Pharaoh’s daughter, and brought her into the city of David. (1Ki
3:1)
While it is clear that an Egyptian princess did visit and marry King
Solomon, the Bible tries to keep this verse separate from the section
that details the ‘additional’ visit to King Solomon by the Queen of
Sheba. (1Ki 10:1-13) But the Kebra Nagast, the Ethiopian Bible,
eventually gives away the Judaic Bible’s long-lost secret. Firstly, the
Kebra Nagast says that this ‘pharaoh’s daughter’ was actually the Queen
of Sheba, which is remarkable enough. Secondly, the text then goes on
to name this princess, and it would seem that she was originally known
as Maakshare – a name that can also be read as Maakhare, as the ‘kh’
and ‘sh’ transpositions between the Egyptian and Hebrew languages are
numerous.
The result of this comparison between three different textual sources
suggests that the Queen of Sheba was an Egypto-Judaean princess who was
called Maakhare Mu-Tamhat in the Egyptian language, and Maakhah Tamar
in the Hebrew. But if this was true, then how did this Egypto-Judaean
princess become known as the Queen of Sheba? The answer lies in the
convoluted consanguinity rules that were applied during this era, and
the resulting marriage between Princess Maakhah Tamar and her father,
King David [Psusennes].
The precise Egyptian name for Pharaoh Psusennes [King David] was
Pa-djuat-khaennuit . It was from the star glyph in this name , which
can be pronounced as djuat *, that this king’s nickname of Duad or
David was derived. Since the djuat was a star that was closely
associated with this particular pharaoh, the common phrase for this
glyph became the ‘Star of Duad’ or the ‘Star of David’. In turn, since
the princess called Maakhah Tamar was now married to King David
[Psusennes], she would naturally have picked up the same associations,
and so she is likely to have been known as the ‘Queen of King Duad’ or
the ‘Queen of King David’.
But there is another, more common way of pronouncing this particular
pharaoh’s name in the modern reference manuals, and that is
Pa-seba-khaennuit. All that has happened here is that the star glyph
has been translated as being the word seba (sheba), which also means
‘star’. If this had been the fashion in ancient times, then King David
could also have been known as King Sheba. This alteration would, of
course, have had a corresponding effect on the title that was given to
Maakhah Tamar, the daughter-wife of King David – instead of being known
as the ‘Queen of King David’, she would quite naturally have been
called the ‘Queen of King Sheba’, or perhaps the ‘Queen of Sheba’ for
short.
The biblical texts confirm this argument when they appear to show that
Maakhah Tamar had another title, that of Bathsheba. This title is
composed of two elements, bath tb meaning ‘daughter’ and sheba ebv
meaning ‘Sheba’. However, this was the name of Maakhah Tamar before she
married, and since she was King David’s daughter she would obviously
have been called the ‘Daughter of Sheba’ (Bath Sheba). It was only
after she married her father that she became the ‘Queen of Sheba’
(Malkah Sheba).
But the biblical texts say that the Queen of Sheba visited King
Solomon, not King David, so how does this new theory solve this little
puzzle? The simple answer to this problem is that Maakhah Tamar
[Bathsheba, the Queen of Sheba] was not only the wife of King David,
but also the young mother of King Solomon. She may have retired to
Upper Egypt after the death of King David – she disappears from the
biblical record at this point in time – but when she later visited her
most famous son, who was now the king of all Israel (and Lower Egypt),
she was still known by her previous formal title of the Queen of Sheba.
This would explain the great wealth and status that the biblical texts
have attached to this monarch; she was, after all, both the king’s
mother and the widow of the most powerful of all the monarchs in that
era, King David [King Sheba or Pharaoh Psusennes].
Confirmation
While the evidence already given may seem to provide a convincing link
between Kind David and the pharaoh Psusennes II, the final pieces of
the jigsaw that truly confirms this hypothesis are the other historical
characters that this theory can also identify. Once more, the classical
perception of history would suggest that the court of Pharaoh Psusennes
and the court of King David would have absolutely nothing in common,
and once more the complete opposite of this is actually true.
The first of these similarities concerns the chief army commander of
King David, who is said to have been called Joab. Surprisingly enough,
the chief army commander of Psusennes II was called Un-tchoab-endjed,
or Joab for short. Thus, surprisingly enough, the biblical and
historical accounts give the same name for this army commander, a fact
that serves to strengthen the links between Psusennes II and King David.
Then there is the strange case of the chief architects of this era.
The Bible indicates that the chief architect of King David and King
Solomon was called Hiram Abi, who is the same individual as is it
mentioned and revered in the masonic world as Hiram Abif. Meanwhile, if
we search though the historical record, it can be seen that the chief
architect of the pharaoh Psusennes II was called Herum Atif. Again this
investigation has discovered the same name for the same individual in
two ‘completely separate’ royal dynasties.
It is apparent that the historical and biblical records precisely agree
on a number of names, titles and positions within these two royal
dynasties of the tenth century BC, and all of these characters were
known to have lived just one generation before the pharaoh Sheshonq I
(the biblical Shishak) came to the throne. Perhaps it is worth listing
these individuals for clarity.
Biblical name Egyptian name Rank or position
King David (Duat) King Psusennes (Duat) A king who reigned before Shishak
Maakhah Tamar Maakhare Mu-Tamhat A daughter of the above king
Joab Un-joab-endjed (Joab) An army commander of the above king
Hiram Abi(f) Herum Atif A chief architect of the above king and his son
This is just the tip of the great iceberg of evidence that Ralph Ellis
has drawn together and which proves conclusively that the Judaic United
Monarchy of King David was actually one and the same as the Lower
Egyptian monarchy of the twenty-first and twenty-second dynasties.
While this declaration in itself represents a major re-evaluation of
both history and theology, this evidence also brings with it one
further dramatic revelation.
A number of excavations have been conducted in Egypt over the years.
One of these discovered a cache of royal mummies at at Deir el-Bahri
near Thebes, while the 1939 expedition of Pierre Montet discovered some
magnificent, intact tombs within the temple enclosure at Tanis. The
latter of these tombs contained the intact sarcophagi of the pharaohs
Psusennes and Sheshonq, who I have identified in the book Solomon,
Falcon of Sheba as being the monarchs of the Israelite United Monarchy.
Thus, it is entirely possible that the magnificent solid silver
sarcophaguses and the mummies of the biblical King David, King Solomon,
Joab, Hiram Abif and the Queen of Sheba all now reside in the Cairo
Museum.
Needless to say, if these biblical heroes do turn out to have been
Egyptian pharaohs, this will be the biggest and most revolutionary
change to our perceptions of history and theology that there has ever
been since the dawn of civilisation. Surprisingly, given the stakes at
issue here, there is a great deal of compelling evidence to suggest
that this thesis is absolutely true, and that millions and millions of
people down the millennia have been completely and utterly deceived by
a few Israelite scribes who deliberately set out to alter history.
© Copyright Ralph Ellis Dec 2002
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