the Pharaoh set the Israelites free because his first and only son died ( he died in the tenth plague he was very upset.
The tenth plague, which involved the death of all firstborn sons in Egypt, was the most devastating of the ten plagues sent by God to persuade Pharaoh to release the Israelites from slavery. This catastrophic event struck fear and sorrow throughout the land, leading Pharaoh to realize the severity of his defiance against God. After losing his own firstborn son, he finally relented and commanded the Israelites to leave, marking a pivotal moment in their journey to freedom.
Some people thought that if you hold herbs up to your nose it would prevent getting it but until antibiotics were created there was no actual cure for somebody who had the plauge
James 1
the plauge i belive...
=The Pharaoh==The Pharaoh=
the second plauge was frogs invading Egypt
the plauge was first dicoverd in 1661
The tenth plague was the death of the firstborn, where God struck down all the firstborn in Egypt, from the firstborn of Pharaoh to the firstborn of the prisoner in the dungeon and even the firstborn of all the livestock. This plague finally convinced Pharaoh to let the Israelites leave Egypt.
no
After his son died in the Tenth Plague (death of the first-born), Pharaoh "expelled" the Israelites from Egypt (Exodus ch.12), essentially granting the demands of Moses.
It was darkness , but Pharaoh only allowed the people to go after the tenth plaque.
The black plauge was from Europe and spread all the way to cover half of Asia it went that far. But now there is no Black Plauge it ended in about the 15 century. I don't know exacly where the Black Plauge started though.
it killed thousands of people
Plauge
wiped them out
The tenth plague, which involved the death of all firstborn sons in Egypt, was the most devastating of the ten plagues sent by God to persuade Pharaoh to release the Israelites from slavery. This catastrophic event struck fear and sorrow throughout the land, leading Pharaoh to realize the severity of his defiance against God. After losing his own firstborn son, he finally relented and commanded the Israelites to leave, marking a pivotal moment in their journey to freedom.
1955