They were shepherds under the protection of the Pharaoh of that time and his viceroy, Joseph.
The famine was in the Land of Canaan (later called Israel), and they Hebrews migrated to Egypt.
The migrated first to Israel. When the Romans expelled them in the year 70, they Migrated all over the world.
A dynasty in Egypt did.
The Hebrews, a Semitic-speaking people, first appeared in Mesopotamia. For instance, Abraham's family were native to Sumer. But between 1900 and 1500 B.C., the Hebrews migrated from Mesopotamia to Canaan and then into Egypt. At this time, a tribe of Hebrews who claimed to be the descendants of Abraham began to call themselves Israelites ("soldiers of God"). The Hebrews were enslaved by the Egyptian pharaohs until 1250 B.C. when their leader, Moses, led them on an exodus out of Egypt to the Sinai peninsula. Moses persuaded his followers to become worshippers of Yahweh or Jehovah.
Joshua
That depends which migration. Abraham migrated with his Hebrew family from Ur to Harran and then to Canaan (see Genesis ch.11-12); Jacob led his Hebrew (Israelite) family, descendants of Abraham, to Egypt (Genesis ch.46); and Moses led the Israelites from Egypt towards Canaan.
I don't think any sausages migrated to Egypt. Mind you, a lot of Bedouins did.
No. Egypt was around thousands of years before the Hebrews ever arrived.
At that time, the Hebrews were slaves in Egypt.
theystayed in Egyptthey stayed in egypt
They were slaves
hebrews