Moses and his brother went and asked him to let them go,When that didnt work God sent plagues such as bugs and death. Eventually being frightened he let them go.
Moses' childhood is not described much in the Bible, although popular retellings often cast him as a playmate the Pharaoh with whom he would eventually argue for the freedom of the Hebrews. (In most retellings, this Pharaoh-to-be was Ramses II.)
Canaanites
The ONLY written information we have about the ancient Hebrews is in the Bible.
The Hebrews numbered around two million souls, so you can do the math.
The Ancient Hebrews were surrounded on all sides by enemies. Thousands of years later, not much as changed.
it was bascally just a sign of how powerful the pharaoh was, how much money he had, etc. so the bigger it was, the more important the pharaoh was
Pretty much all the variations.
no when you are frightened your body releases hormones and nuerotransmitters, these are such things as adrenaline, this makes peoples heartrate much faster and also it makes people shake. When people feel frightened adrenline is triggered by the brain to be released into the bloodstream, this triggers the 'fight or flight' sensation in which the person conquers what they may be afriad to do such as fight someone or go absailing etc or they can run away and avoid the event.
The Pharaoh was the supreme religious authority. The Pharaoh was believed to be, not so much a man or a king but, a God. Religion and Government were not separated in Ancient Egypt.
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If you mean Thutmosis III, the pharaoh in the story of Moses, he refused to let the Hebrew people leave Egypt, where they were pretty much enslaved.
It means to be pretty much an Egyptian king.