The wonders of the ancient world that one would find in Egypt are the Great Pyramids of Giza, which were built durig the century prior to 2500 BCE. Notice that date.
Supposing that the ancient Hebrews really were slaves in Egypt they could not have arrived before about 1800 BCE, as they are portrayed in The Bible as leaving Egypt in 1440 BCE after a 400 year sojourn there. By the time of their arrival in Egypt, the pyramids were already quite ancient. No serious historian would believe the ancient Hebrews had any part in building the pyramids.
In fact, the clear consensus of historians is that the Hebrew nation was never in Egypt, there was no Exodus from Egypt as described in the Bible, and no conquest of Canaan. They say that the Israelites were actually rural Canaanites who left the region of the rich coastal cities and settled in the hitherto sparsely populated hinterland.
it was used as a record of the ancient hebrews
Artifacts, includeing the Torah
It is a valuable artifact because it was written as a historical record of the ancient Hebrews.
There is no mention in any text of encounters between the Ancient Hebrews and the Hyksos. There are some historians who claim that the Hebrews and the Hyksos are the same people, but this is a rare minority view.
Yes, the Ancient Hebrews traded gold.
No. The Ancient Hebrews spoke Hebrew.
The ancient Hebrews believed only in their own culture.AnswerThe beliefs and practices of the Torah.
The Ancient Hebrews have been called:IsraelitesChildren of IsraelPeople of IsraelIsraelJudaeansJews The Egyptians called them Habiru.
According to the Torah, they only conquered the Canaanites. Some historians and scientists theorize that they actually *WERE* the Canaanites.
The Bible makes no mention of any sports played by the ancient Hebrews.
The ancient Hebrews had no concept of democracy, and therefore had contributed nothing to it.
It depends at what point, but mainly Hebrew and Aramaic.